The, - -.! . Stor-y ef Greenwood> Lake

Transcription

The, - -.! . Stor-y ef Greenwood> Lake
erHE
Serving the
Greater
Greenwood
Official Newspaper
ViUage of
Greenwood Lake
School District
No. 11
. Lake, N. Y.
Area
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rh eSt 0 r y
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f Gr e e n W
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"The, Stor-y ef
Greenwood >Lake"
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One of our earlier distinguished 'citizens' when ·Gr.enwood Lalce'.
was' lcnown as Long Pond.... .
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'nThe Story of Greenwood Lake"
A Message from the Publishers
/ . The year 1974. marks the fiftieth anniversary of the incorporation, of the
Village of Greenwood, Lake. It was, also, fifty years ago that our Greenwood
Lake Volunteer Fire Dept. was organized. ' A Golden Anniversary Festival in
August celebrates these two important events.
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The history of oui' community goes back many;many rears. As you
rea~ the following pages, you willieam about the rich heritage which has been
recorded in the pages of time.
The idea for this special edition was'conceived almost ,one year ago. We
came to the Lake in 1962 and since that time, we heard many: fascinating "
tales abOut the area as related by "natives." Last year, when plans,were being discussed for a, grand celebration in 1974, we made our own plans to publish"The Story of Greenwood Lake." We believed that "newcomers'" as
well as some "oldtimers" would be interested in kn.9wing more about how
our community developed: There were bits and fragments of historical lore '
scattered~ere and there. , Weae'fermined 'to put it all together.
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The groundwork began. We asked people to check thejr attics, cellars
and closets for photographs and any other memorabilia' which would 'allow
us to piec~ together the whole story;, Material was slow in coming in to us.
But, as we began to talk about it, the enthusiasm for this project began to '
. grow. The next step was to find someone to put -it all together in an '
interesting fashion. \Ve also recognized that. the information we had, showed gaps in the periods of development; these had to be filled in if we were
. going to present an orderly "Story of Gr~enwoodLake." We wanted this
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publication to be as accurate and factual as possible.
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We were fQrtunate to have Mrs. Barbara Gerry work widi us. ~rs. Gerry has, in the past, written several acrticles of special interest for publication in the regular editions of the ,Greenwood Lake News. Her own inimiEditor and pu blisher of the Greenwood Lake Newstable style of pre~enting these various tales of by-gone years in a wann, ,
Olga and Ed Cudney.
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, nostalgic manner, have received many compliments. She did not let us down
this time. ~lt is her narratives: which helped us get this publication going.
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Her writings gave us the b~sis on which t o build.
. A report of this magnitude could not possibly ~ accomplished by one. person alone. H~ndreds of hours of researcft
were necessary. D.ays were spent in several _libraries, museums, and t he Orange County Government Center, as well ,as maoy"
hours in personal interviews - tying together the many facts ",ve had received ,and filling in the m.issip.g pieces. All this
research was done by Mrs. Genevieve""'Winstanley. It was-:- she who then 'edited all the copy, added many pages of her own
origin~ composition, sketched the maps you will. be looking at, handlettered' significant sections' and a~sted us in coordinating all the material for publication. Her help was in.valuable.
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'When it comes 'to acknowledging t he many people .who supplied us with photographs and -other pertinent data, we are
fearful that we .may overlook someone. So many JVere involved in so many different ways. We sincerely exyess our appreciation to all of you who assist~ us in various phases of th!s undertaking.
~ -""The Story _of Greenwood L~e " has been -published with this purpose in mind .- We ferven):ly hope that you will
now be acquainted with tl;te, history of the area; be proud of this heritage, and work, ,toward maintai'ning thoSe things
which are good, improve those which need to be· changed and take an active part in planning for the future. Let it be
said that we, the residents of Greenwood Lake in the year 1974. did pledge ourselves to the betterment of our comIQunity for the enjoyment of future generations,
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- . As the Village_of Greenwood Lake and its Volunteer Fire Dept. celebrate their Golden 'Anniversaries, we ask you to
. join with us in hoping that each new year will be otie of greater progress in a direction which will make Greenwood
Lake an outstanding community in the annals of future hist6ry.
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We are very proud to be part of this community. We hope you are, too.
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References:
Many thanks to:
Robert Gallaiit
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Jack Conklin
KeD Fredricks
Emma Kay Ball
Edward English
Wilbur Christman
Margaret Nehrich
Victor J . Ludmerer
Frank Benz
Helena Murchio
JohnMiDer
Margatet Hallock
Oaude Pembleton
Margaret Stonehouse
Gloria Qriackenbush
Joe JacksQD, Jr.
August Emm~rich
Dorothy uby
Florence Ryerson
Ann Hall .
Walt Trumper Raymond Garrison
... Greenwood Lake Fire Dept. '.
Spike Detro
Doris Greek Martin
Evelyn Pollero
William Robertson
Bucky Sayer
Fred BuehJer
George WettHn
B. J. Heffernan .
Bernard Winstanley
Abbie Waters '
Margaret Pitt
Jack Welchman
Harry Foy .
St af emen t
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Past iSsues of the "Warwick Valley Dispatch", "The Buzzer", ''TheGreenwo~d~e News"
"The Warwick Woodlands", Frank Forrester .....Greenwood Lake Library
" Greenwood Lake Trail Guide", Louis Sigaud_ ....Greenwood Lake Library
"History of Orange Counw", E-. M. Ruttenber & L. H. Oark .....Goshen Library
"Outline of History of Orange County._.1908", Russell Headley'. ~ ...Goshen· Library
"Claudiu.s , Cowboy of the Ramapos", Peter Johnson, 1894.....Goshen Library
"Vanishing Ironworks of the Ramapos", James M. Ransom
Charles clinton's "Marble Book" .... ,orange 9lunty ~venunent Center, Goshen, N,Y.
Deeds and Maps of Orange County, No.ble Patent, Cheesecock Patent, Wawayanda Patent
..... Orat!ge County GQvetnment Center, Goshen, N.Y. ' . .
"History of Greenwood L3ke", DoUy Ragone, Historian, Greenwood Lake Library
Wisner Memorial Library of Warwick
Goshen Historical Society
"Orange County Guide"
.' "Collection of Poem~", Satella Shl'rps Waterstone
"DUmont Heritage ... Old SChralenburgh, New Jer,sey", H. Jeanne Altshuler
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" 1'H EST 0 RY 0 F GREE NWO OD l AKE"
This special edition of The Greenwood Lake News, "The Story of Greenwood Lake", has been publishedby Executive ASsociates, Wind~rmere 'Ave'" Greenwood·Lake, N .. Y,l092S. Own~s are Olga
and Edward A, CuOney. Publication date; July 24, 1974,
St~: Shirley Saye, Suzanne Zwick,
Trudy Penaluna, Ann Randall,_ Irene Coyman,
- (A copy of "The StOf'Y of Greenwood Lake" is to be placed in the Time Caosule which will be buried in Greenwo'o d Lake on Sunday, August 18. 1974,)
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tfThe Sto_ry of _Greenwood .Lake"
The Original PeoQle:
Tbe history and legends of the Lenni-Lena~ Indians, an 'enchanting story of the people who were the
first "settlers" in Greenwood Lake, can be found ,in
the reference books in the New York City Museam of
the Amerl'can Indian. The "Wa'lumO'lum" (Red Scroll)
was originally a set of five sticks, covered with symbols and painted red (Talking Sticks). One meml'ler of
the tribe was trained from chUdhoo1 to be tribe his- ,
torian (Talking W»1), an1 ,le and an assistant in
training would go from t.ribe ,to tribe, up and down the
Atlantic seaboard, to chant the tribal history of the
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Lenni- Lenape.
The arrival of Talking Wo.')d sigmued the start of -a
three-day ' festival.- At tbe awro~riate tim€, the entire
tnl>e would assemble in the community hut and, with
' great ceremony, Talking wOod and his' assistant wouldcarry tbe Talking Sticks into the hut aild lay them on ,
a 'spec1al white blanket. Then the entire -history of
the Lenni-Lenape w·.)llld be c~ged, with the symbols '
on each, stick, serving as "cues" for each part of the
story.
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According to transiations of tribal leg~, the
Lenni- Lenape crossed- to thls- continent about 15,000
years ago. They were ,the "HJ.nters" following the
animals who retreated ' before the ice -age. Anthropologists have grouped the Lenni-Lenape as a part
of tbe , Algonquin Nation, identj1ied by language and
,llalect. The movem<;·nts of the Lenni-Lenape O'!l this
continent were guided by a tribal prophecy ,wh~ch told
them " to travel toward the sunrise until yo'.! fintl the
water that flows two ways." Abolt. 8,000, years ago,
the Leani-Leilai>e finally reached the HudsO:l River with the tldalflow. The prophecy, which promised a
land of fair climate and. plentiful game, was fulfilled;
The Nation settled all along the East CO'lSt, from the
Hudsoo Bay to Tennessee.
In the southern region, the sub-tribe 9f LennlLenape were known as the ' UnalachUgo. The central
people were the Unamt; a local tribe of that region,
the Ack:iligh-sacks, were tbe Indians who mp.~ Henry
Hudson 0>3 his .first voyage in 1609. , The Indians whosettled in the north were called the Mtnsi. This was
the brancb of Lennl-Lenape who IIl!lde their encamp;..
mt>nt on the shores of LO.1g PQ-,]·l , with a ma.in village
located OIl the site of W!nd ~rmere Park.
In tho!! Wa'lum O'lum, tho!! symbol of the Turtle
was a reminder of the story of the Creation: "The
world was llllt!d with water. A giant Turtle raised /
up JUs baclC an:! the water ran_ off. This 'was Ule
_earth. When the earth b:ad dried, a tree' grew from
the back of the -turtle. This was man. The tree
bent over until its top toucbed tbe earth and it sent
out another shoot. ,This was wom~n." -Tbe TUrtle
also saved ::bo!! people from a gre3t 'FIco:l :l7 carrying the Lennt-Lenape- on its back until the waters
had receded, The. tribe whicb had a Turtle as their
totem was a leader in government.
However,' government was a 1():>S9ly organized
system.
Each tribe was- an Independent bo1y and
CoUld cboose whether to join m a raid, remain neutral, or move from the area altogether. The It.Great
Chief" was the Sachem, or Peace Chi-ef. He was
responsible for the welfare an:i happiness of oall his
peo;>le. The inQueace ~ the Sachem (such. as 6ratem
of the Ac.ldngh-sack tribe) was usually the prevailing one. He could be superseded by the War Chief,
but only in time of all-out war. And there-was seldo:n ~ll-o~~ W3l'.
In:iivldual raids by trib~s ware conducted for the
excitemp.nt or prestige of .,the actio':l, or to train
young warriors and braves. The Lennl-Lenape did
not want to vanquish his foe, for then he cO'Jld no
longe'i' con1ud these raids. When a particularly strong
and courageous enemy was encountered and defeated,
the Lenni-Lenape would usually adopt rather than slay
him, Adopt,ton was a frequent occurrence.
In Lennt-Leaape culture, a1r of nature - w.!n11i
I'O'!k, tr~...s, rain, streams - was d:!ified. 'Having no
control over nature, the Indian wished to propitiate
-eaeh part,.
Therefore, he worshipped and deifiedall of it.
Tbe overall supernatural _force which he
believed was pres~t til all ~hings, whether lor good
or for evU, was' called- Manitou. This religion concerned only his daily ille, the immediate Present, _
m:.derial..-thtngs. 11· death-was honorable, there was
.0:> . after life.
His only lear was ' that tho:! spirit of
,things dead ,could cOI\l~ ' back to do him personal
evil.
He was concerned about death only insofar ,
that the ~ormallties should be done right to keep this
sp~itfrom refUrning to do him harm.
MEN AND WOMEN OFTHE LENNI-LENAPE
TRIBE 'v'l'ORKING TOGETHER.
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The Indian was_ a proud person and self-esteem
was most important to him. However, honor and prestige had to be earned; there was ::1.0 way it could 00
hand~d dow!l from father to son. To earn this esteem,
rougb and dangerous games w'~re devised. Winning
was most important, -and the Lenni-Lenape was excessively competitive. But hoe competed only when
- he was involved in a "game", or if hts personal
honor was threatened. The accumij~atio.j of m2'erlal
things did not matter at all. Once the famHy and
tribe , had collected enough for their .1mmed!ate- need,
the remainer could be given away, and m,)re often
than not, this is exactly wbat hap.;>,eiled.
The Lennl-Lenape village was usually a two-mile
areaObuilt along' a .running stream. Both sexes worked
to sustain tbe community. A great bQuse, or ceremonial . hut, was the , c~tral building. ' Tilts was where
guests and visitors :were lodged. Smaller' huts for
the- unmarried men were placed around tbe great
bouse. 'surrounding both were- the family houses,
domed hUts made of bent saplings wil1ch won-eocover' ad with larg-e slabs of bark. When household 'Waste
became exceSsive, or if gam-e animals ml~ed from
the area, the tribe moved to a new location. _At
least twenty square ffiUes w~re needed for hunting
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for each famlly.
Food was cooked in a great pot, and eating was '
a very infQ:m')l thing. Whenever he was ready, each
person simply- helped himself.
This varied only
when a ceremony ~as being held. All were .required
to attend meetings whi~h would affect their w!311.:.
b~ing_; , .at those ttm.'i'S, eat1rig W't3 finis!led ':>elo'!"e
the ceremony began. - The Lenni-Lenape was scrupulous. about sharing food and lodging with visitors.
T he young and the aged w~re 'well-car-ed for, ' too.
Hospitality and good IIr.lnners were v~ry imponant
to ,the Lenni·Lenape. Tbey were taught to listen,
without interruption 'Or comment, until the speaker
signaled that he was finished, and to offer the best
of ' everything to, all guests and visito;:s. It was a
.grlevo:l;, o~eilse in thetT----. .::ulture to be impolite.
When the "Swannekens", the "people from over
the ' s,a lt water", came to live among the Indians,
their cuStoms and culture differed greatly from that ·
of the Len1l-Lenape.
Although the Dutch people
w,~re friendly for the first fewm()nths, they soon
settled into the habits · of tbe "Old World." After
their first show of hospitality, the DJtch were amaZed
-an1wgry W!lIID tb~Indiari wo:lld ell~er t.l ieir ho,'.lS~
an1 help thems;~lves to the food available. This was
normai behavior for the Leimi-Lenape. Being overly
THE LAYOUT OF A LENNI, LENAPE VILLAGE
sensitive 'to -the tlemands of hospitality within their
OW!! cultu,r e, they -were keenly aWru'e when this hospitality was being withdrawn by another. The reactions of the "Swannekens" deeply' hurt and puzzled
the Indian.
There w!;!re- ml!llY ,other oecurreneas which upset
the In·1.la.,.; The whites kept tbe best houses for themselves;. it was usual to otter this to a visitor. Tbe
Indian could not understand why_ the whites cO::J.Stantly
interrupted, (or an talked at the same timt' ). This was
ve.7 ru1e. There was no such thing as "small talk"
among the ' tribes. ;. When someone spoke, it was because tbere was something to say, or because he
was "entertaining" the listene)'. Since the LenntLenap-e had only to 'w orry a:bQ.'J!: hts imm:~,Late needs,
be llad nothing e1se. to do bat - listen. Also, the .Indian did not like to answer a question more than once.
11 a person ,was listening tb~ first Um-a, he would have
heard the answer given. 11 the sam~ question was
asked again, it was bl!callse someone dId not like the
first reply. The Indian believed it was po11t,e tben to
tell the questioner what he believed was a pleasing
answer, whether it was the CORRECT reply or not.
Because ' of this custom, and because the Swrumeken
some~lme asked the sam€- question - over and over, the Indian earned the reputation of being a,Iiar, when
all he wanted to do was please the questioner.
An~er custom which was not thoroughly underst(),)-j by the first wMte settlers w~.s th~ oW!lership
of land. In In:Ult;1 ,culture,. territory--was a tribal
milier, not an individual's private properly. This ,
was the reason wily only after a conference of chiefs
could land be - signed over, or deeded to the Newco;ners~
Even the.'l, the Indians had no,ide-a--that they
were to vacate the land after signing. This was an
entirely new concept••••• the idea that one family would
liv~ in a plo! of land, fenced o-~ from his neigbbors,
and "stay" tied to a little -p~e-;:e of groU1.rl. It w\):lld
take alm~st a full generatio:l, and' many unpleasant
experiences on both Sides," before this matter of
"deeding land" waq an accepted fact •
, As stated before, the Le.1Di-LenaM w~re a prou1
-'-peo;lle. 'tile] soo'] learned to accept the differen·::es
b~en them:,elves and the ' Swannekens. Tbey did
-----not rese~ustom
'of "owning land". Tbeyhad
many mountains -_a:nd----p~, away from. fences and
small talk, w!1ere tbeY coula-mov-e..!beir tribes. Their
nam.:" "Lenni--L enape" was an mdieation of their
~llfe-style:
"First mawy men, unmixed· ,w1th~other
l'aces, the ORIGlN AL PEOLE."
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AN ALGONQUIN
INDIAN VILLAGE,
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"The Story . of
Greenwood Lake"
The Indians and the Cheesecock Patent
..... The sun's lo.ng afterno.on r~ys glistened o.ff the liinesto.ne r~cks o.f the 'cliffs o.nthe east sho.re o.f Lo.ng Po.nd. ''The west sho.re was atready in shado.ws.
Out o.f the evening dews, silently and steadily, :nearer came six cano.es with the familiar green turtle in an o.ctago.n painted o.n their pro.ws. This was the
sigr] fJf the Mins"i$ bmnch o.f the Lenni Lena e natio.n whose cam '. was at t~.eo.rthem end o.f Lo.n .E~c!.
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On the sho.re, the tribe waited just as silently as their chief and his council mo.veCITo.t ewater's edge. In the cano.e·s was a delega~o.n fro.m the Great Chief
Maringo.mack. On this c(ay, the Lo.ng Pond tribe wo.uld receive his wo.rd.
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7'he cano.es were clo.ser no.w, in the shallow water. As they landed, a brave leaped fro.m o.ne o.f the cano.es ana appro.ached the chief with a .packet. The
chief unro.Ued the scro.U and seeing the mar.k o.f Maringo.mack o.n the bo.tto.m, mo.tioned Jo.r the <;o.uncil to. begin. A brave of the Lo.ng Po.nd tribe stepped fo.rward to. recite co.uncil directio.ns which, were, by traditio.n, r~newed b,efo.re every tribal co.uncil. Standing erect o.n a small mourtdjn fro.nt o.f the tribe, the cho.sen Indian recited.
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"OffeT'thanks to. the e~rth where men dweU. To. the streams o.f water, the po.o.ls, the springs, the lakes, to. the maize and the fruits, to. the medicinal herbs
and, the trees, to. th~-fo.rest trees fo.r their usefulnessf to. the animals that serve as fo.o.d and o.ffer their pelts as clo.t!J.ing, to. the great winds arid lesser winds~ to
the thunderers, and the sun, to. the messengers of the Great Spirit who. gives aU thing$ useful to. man, which is the so.urce o.f health and life. "
Then, in the dimming light o.f day, tTi'rchief and his council heard the wo.rd o.f the Great ChIef Maringo.mack; heard o.f the treaty signed by five o.f the
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Great Chiefs o.f the' Lenni Lenape, which gave the land to. white men who. were fro.m the Great Queen o.f England. The year was 1702. The. treaty was after.
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ward kno.wn as the. Cheeseco.ck Patent .....
While Nieu Netherlands was still under Dutch
· rule, pharles n of England claimed the colony by
right of prior discovery. He then . granted to his
- brother James, .the Duke of York and Albany, "all
the land between theConnecficut River and the Delaware . R~er." James was to "be a . "Proprietor",
and tli!! colony's- govemorwouldbe appointed by him;
all settlers would then buy their land from the Indian
· owners. aDd pay a "quit renf;" fee to the Proprietor.
When. James became James n, King of England in
1~85, New York became .a "royaI" colony, answerable .directly to the King (thrqugh the royal-appointed .
. Governor), and all Indian dee(is were tben apprOved
by the .Crown. King James' daughter Anne became '
Qileen of Engl~d in 1702.
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In 17071 the Cheesecock: Patent was .confirmed by
Queen Anne; New York had been. an .English colony for
.over thirty years. Land grant treaties wJth local Indian tribes were the usual procedure before English
seIDers claimed the land. The Lenni Lenape were
famlliar with the cus-tom; in 1664, Lenni Lenape
Sachem Oratum had observed the forma11t1es which
transferred Dutch colonies to English rule. Untll his
death in 1667, oratum presided over many negotiations between lIld1an proprietors and English land
purchasers. as ·more and more Dutch and English
settlers moved north and west or New Amsterdam
· (New York) to establlsll homes in the lower Hudson
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Valley.
An Indian deed was presented to. each purchaser.
There were no Indian wars or uprisings. due to land
settlement once this method was established. Land
ownership was cheap - .the Indians asked very little
10 return - and Indian deeds were' soon ' measured in
miles ins-tead of acres. Without fanfare, or even th~
knowle<1ge of it. a new era' was taking form in this
'. country.
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As settlers buUt bomes and fenced off land the
Indians moved farther and turther aw.ay · fron: the
cleared land and back into the wilderness •.
. The principal enemy"O[ the peaceM Lenni Lenape-,
.a 6ranch of the AlgonqUin nation, were the fierce Iroquois woo werea.' confederation of Six Nations of
Indian tribes which demanded tribute from all other
Indian nations. Years later, this would be one of the
\factors ' which would determine Algonqnin all1ance
with the French ' in the waiwfth Eilgland for suprem'acy on the -North A,meri~ continent. ·The early
skirmishes, with both :EUroP.e8n nations ' encouniglDg
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Indian raids on .far-removed outposts and trading
campos, would eventually result in the French and
Indian War which would not be nPally decided untU '
1763.
Anne Stuart, (4Jeen of Great Britain .
Who I;onfirmed the Ghee$ecock Patent
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.' But at t1!e time of the Cheesecock Patent, and tor
many years after, the Lenni L'enape of the Ramapo
area llved peac~ly on the north shore of Long Pond.
The English proprietors wElre New York merchants who
did Q~ disturb the Indian encampme;lt, nor did they
. bother abo:Jt the trad'3rs' and trappers who also-Hved
on the shores of the lake. Nor were the new proprietors yet interested 10 the Dut
ers W!lO had
;settled two miles north ~ the.1nd1an encam..nml'nt in
the area later known as "Dutch Hollow". TIiese
farmers who had coma inland -fromLQng Island and
the shores of Connect.lcut, or who had moved .north
from -:ith.gr settle-m ~nts near Hackensack and Paramus
in New Jersey colony to build their crude homeS in
tlie. rich, 'beautiful valley. W9re helping to fUU'Ill a' re-.
<I'J\ reme,l~ of th.g Cheesecock Patent tha! the land be
i . settled.
The Cheesecock 'Patent was .....a huge land grant.
Together with the Wawiyanda, M.ln1sink, and -John
Evans Patents, it comprised almost the entire land of _
the n.gw~y forml!,j Orange Co"JDty. Tbe survey whiCh
was not tiled until 1769 shows the Cheesecock Patent
to extend from "the pro~rty of the Widow Van'Duzan
at Loo:5house Hlli in Beardsv1Ile' , to the Ram!l.':)()
River (north to south), 'and from the New York-New
Jersey boundary to a point beyond "Mt. Basben Pond"
(east and w~s!). It incluri..,d all of Long Pond north of
.the bowia.ary line 6el ween Ule colonies of New York
-and Jlie Jlrseys.
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But for many years, this·. exact 'boundary line was
pot known. It was not until Charles Clinton surveyed
the land betw9en_.1735 and 1'149 for William Smith...
.Tohn Chambers, Janos Alexander and Phi111p Livingston that a Une was definite. Mi·. 'ellntoil described
the land ·~overed in each tilY'S Journey with markel'S
such as "a beap of Slag lying in the yard of the bam
oWned by thetorm'$ r farmer on the ' King's Road".
He w"uld then evaluate the lOt covered by wil1king
on fo~ for ' one ~y with words such as "sw~p
surr~)Unded by g, high ridge of oak sap11Dgs; ·1 call
it poor land." Ip ano~her place, he s es::ribes all
the timber and the moantain. ·and w!'ltes, "1 calL
. it a middling lot." Each "lot", or Hie amount of
land covered in one day, is ass1g:ned ·to one of the .'four men who commissioned 'l1m. ,.
Charles .Clinto:l's survey ' took almon fourteen. ' .
years. His journey and the 'descriptions of the land '
were kept in a book now known as the .. marble bOok" '::
because of the appearance ot the c0J7er~ CUn(oil's' "marble book" is 0!1 ·f ile at the County. Bulldlng in
Goshen, N.Y. and is avallable to the _PllbUc. ,..,ms
. d4*icriptio:JS and the archaic bounQaries uSed in thoSe
lime:> make very intereSttDg reading. .. - .
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Dutch Hollow Homes '
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The- first crude homes in DUtch HolloW were
. nearly square, about .16- by 18' • . All materials to
bulld these oomes were from ' the land around
them. Corner and side posts were tree logs with
crotches to hold the log pOles uSed as siding• .
Wood pins, made on · the SPOt. were used to fasten
poles. A gutter was dug around the outside of the
buUding to receive moisture. set in this gutter
were palisades, split logs leaning inward against
. the posts. Tbe pitch of the roof was determined
by a riage pole, layed on the crotch of two poles;
at each end of the shorter side. The roof was
composed of poles. brush and bark. The entire
structure was always .in danger considering that
the fireplace, or cooldng":heating area was in the
center of the cabin, and the smok~ wi!nt through a
three-foot square hole in the center of the roof.
The same hole was also used as a skylight, as
glass windows were conveniences of the distant
.,
future.
INDIAN SIGNERS OF THE CHEESECOCKPATENT
The tables and beds in tbese crude homes
wre all built into the walls. The tqble was a
large log, about siX feet long, level on one side,
and resting on small timbers which extended into .
the room from holes bOred in the side of the cabin.
Beds were made in the same way. Wooden plates,
called "tte~chers" were used for food.
Many Indian tribes owned land through the sguaws of the tribe. ' Possession was matrilineat and
squa~ attended maj~r cou.ncil mee~ings and voted in council. This was a great protection for .
the children of the tnbes who remamed with the squaws until taking over adult duties. Should
a brave be killed in battie, or die while out hunting, land and tribal possessions were safeguard·
ed because they descended through the maternal side of Indian families.
.
.
.
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•
p-------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--------------------- ,~----------------------------~----~
6
"The Story of ·Greenwood LalCe";
-'The Mines and F.u rnaces
In 1736, Cornelius Board . came to the Ramapo
Mountains looking for mineral deposits. He was
. an agent for William Alexander, the self-styled Earl
of stirling who was one of the Queen's favorites
granted a tract of land under the Cheesecock Paten£.
Mr. Board 10und outcroppings of iron ore at sterling
Lake. ,Together with Tim,othy Ward, Cornelius:8oard
purchased 100 acres of.property and...erected a "bloomeJ'Y."
Thin1dng thai the land ' they O'N!l'~was in
the Jerseys., the two- purehased adjolnlng l and and
extended their holdings into Eagle Val);ey. The ; first ·
iron made at sterllil was the crill1e..proju::t of th~
oloomer in 1738.; the earliest record of mmtng in
the Ramapo Mountains was by CornelIus Board and
partner at the Sterling mines. .
.
,The-area was well- uited for iroll-m2.km",. Nearby lakes an ' streams provided
equate power for
the bloomery, ~d'
timber of the surrounding
countryside rovided charcoal fOr sto1dng.
fh
were ~undant. Prior to thiS · lime I ron ad to lJ.a
imported from England, "and ' was very ~ive.
The discovery of Iron ore in the Ramt'pos, and the
readily ' available resources to refine and forge the '
ore meant the OO,giQlling of col~~erlca.!sJh:st
heav indlistl1':••••ffiON MAKING.
There were many a en rous men' iD the early
1700's who were eager to 'gamble ,ou the new mdustry.
By 1'740, Cornelius Board had profitably
sold h1sshare of the sterlblg site' and, moved his
business interests lottie Rlngwoodarea. It W'l'lld
seem that a great many Investments ware mad.!
at Sterling between 1740 ~d 1'760, as various owners .
~ listed for ' this propertY after Board's departure.
,Meanwblle, .the ' pro;>ertyat the southern emi of
Long Pood was bought piece by piece by Board anl1 the
Ogden famUy. In 1'764, this s1tuat1oil would be cl!anged
by a very enterpriSing Gerinan named Peter Hasenclaver. ,He hadv1stoD$ Of an lron empire and '115
Id9as wer.e one hundred years before tbe times.
Hasenelaver had formed a company in England specltlcally to buy andbulld Iron furnaces in America.
He advertised in Germa.'lY for workers ' to accompany
b1m ou the saillilg to New York. Yet, HE HAD NEVER
, SET FOOT IN AMERICA!
Within two mouths after landing in New York,
Hasenclaver bad purchased the Ringwooj Iron Estates and was soon pro1l1cing lroo ore anC! manuNot 'long afterwar<4 be
facturing iron products.
acquired 50,000 addltio!lal acres and soon ~)Ullt fO:ll"
mo'!"e Iron wo:-ks whlle managing ,the one 'at Rlngwood.. His "Long Pond" fUrnace, located two mlles
downstream from the lake, required a constant supply of water and to ensure this supply, Hasenclaver
built the first dam to cross ,Greenwood Lake in
1766...... 200 teet long and 5 feet high across tbe
southern Up of the lake.
Hasenclaver also built coal houses, frame houses, .
cabms, bridges, roads:. stables, a reservOir, and
Iogho'JSes; he bougbt borses, oxen anEi cows, ana increased his land holdings to include areas in the
Mohawk Valley and Canada. HIs ambitious behavior
greatly ' alarme::t his partners and the England-based
firm soon sent another manager, Jeston Humfray
(Humphrey), to replace Hasenclaver. After requesting a colontal,commlttee to review b18 business, and
obtalnlng ,a favorable report, Hasenclaver went tOI
England to settle legal matters. He never returned
to America. By. 1771, Robert Erskine was in charge
,of the RIngwood group of mines and furnaces and
remli'.1ned there until his death in 1780. Throughout
the American Revolution, RingwOod furnaces and Robert,
Erskine would lJe devoted to the Colonial cause.
The other furnace which 'Would f!gure greatly in
Pie Amencan Revolution was built , at: SfernDg ..
1751.
Prior 0 tlrtS, sterlmg was ~roduclng only
crude "bloom"~ The furnace wItb a v311ced 'Unprovemenfs produced "pigs" or ' ingots that were
easier to ,handle, load and store, and also semtfmished iro,a products, the begUinlng of a very suc- '
cessful operation. One year after the furnace was
finished, the Noble family became associated- with
Sterling as William Noole' and his son Abel bunt
a forge near the furnace. The first anchors. were
forged in 1753. In .1759, W1l1iam Hawxhurst joined
the venture ..
W.Hllam Hawxhurst Wa.ji a promo,or.
He lost,
e
IRON MINERS-This photo was taken in the late 1800's., Not too long after, the mines were shut down.
.no tim., in patitioning the- New 'York Provtncl31 Assembly for the. sole right to make anchors and anvils
in New York.
His petition was u.nsuccessflll, but
h18 frequent adv~tisem ?..l1ts in New York City papers
brought the name 01 the furnace and forge to the
attention of the market.
Many of th~ aar'c!rt18em.-:nts of' that era ware
sImp;., to a..'tract workers, labOrers, drivers and clerks to the area. Hasenclaver's ads were speciftc
in , wantln~ vmrkers ' I' of German extraction, or -able /
to worlCiD the Germ:mm~er." M.)st ads Pfomised
hOUSing, church services, schools, and a ' salary.
The salary was not always thaf great because the
workers c~ged supplies at th~ ::ompny-oW!led Store
and ,the ain.)Ult they ran. up was· deducted before
w~es were paid.
But , Hawxhurst advertised simply
to keep the ' name 01 sterling ' in the pu~llc eye. He
told .)! "n;~w furnaces intended to boa , ba11t" and
notitled the public of the available tron 'goods produced at sterling and "now waiting" for purchase.
In 1760, he was petitioning the Pr07Incial ASsembly
, again, this time for pernlission to build a road.
Transp:>rtation fro'm the furnaces to N~w York
City markets had tong been, a' problem" Ringw!.)oj
,Ironworks had to carl Iron products over erode,
rut-f1l1ed dirt roads some twenty seven mlles to
Dernerest Landing in New Jersey; their situation w'Juld
be dlfflcult until 1834. Hawxhurst solved the problem
for, sterlliJ.g Furnaces and other businesses til the
New York area. Reeetvln,5 Assem~ly parm\s510il.
Haw.'>:hu!'st formed a commission with Charles Clinton
and Heni"y Wisner to build a public road (now Route 210}
from sterlblg to Haverstraw O~ the Hudso!l 'River,
wbere goo.::IS could be floated ' dow'.lStream to New
York. The expeuses were paid by the pet1t1oners,
voluntary cootr1butors, lnhabltants, and others who
bad Interests In the are~
The road cootrJbuted
,greatly to the successful exp8DSion of O~ County,
and; of course, to tbe profit of sterUng Furn~.
About l'16-8, another c~ was math at terYng
F~ .n.a.. ~
was n
knOWll ~ Abel No~
and..peter T~ and .W1ll1am Hawxh
was the
agent In New York. For sever@!. years, the
furnace was engaged In"producing anchors .PIg Iron,
b~ar il:oDr-axlesrPots... tea kettIiS' and assorted items.
In l775~~.arently anti p :fif.t'Th Revolut1o~, NOOel
~Tbw!lsen:l :>egan to expanlttbefrfo-rges-, enrar~
the forges,.l1l. g -S eel.
tttift1 a year, Sterling
'Was supplying the ContInental ArJDY.
Iil 1778,
eter owusen negotiated a cootract
wtth the ContinenW Army to turn out the links for
a chain to be p1aced across the Hudson River at
West Pomt to block BrItish ships fro:n r'llulng access -to 'Jl.~ Colo'ltal fort. Th~ ore was mined at
Long 'and sterling m1nes~ .-and work on the chain
was Carl-ed on twenty fOUl" hours a day. 'I'he cba1n
..was over ' 170:> feet long ll1ld est.1males of its weight
vary from 60 to 150 tons. It was carried in sect100s
to the Hudson River, joined and floated on logs across
the river at a point where a be:lli :in the l1v-ar re- qu1red ships to tack.
With mo m,:mtum so reduced,
. the, Brlt181l ships would be unable to break it. The
chain was never put to the test. The British ships
never tried to get past it.
f1rm~8
Portion of chain mineq and cast in this area that WlS floated on logs across the Hudson River just billow West Point to
halt. B,ritish warships during the Revolutionary War. Note swivel and joiner in foreground. This section of the chain is
exhibited north of the parade grounds at West Point Military Academy.
,
.
The American Revolution in Orange County
The American Revolution ' had a profound affect
on others in the Ramapo Mountaln area as well.
At the outset of th-9 war for indepai1·j:!n,~e. Committees 'of SaIety and O!:>servafio'l 'Were formed throughout Orange Connty. They Circulated declarations of
allegiance to the Colomal cause from house to house.
Those W!10 refused to sIgn w,e re considered allies
of the British. One of ' those who did not signihe
"hated document" was CiaudlusSm1th "Cowboy of
' ,
,
the Ramapos" •
, The Smith ' famlly came to the Ramapo Valley
from Long Island where Claudius was born. They
settled in the vicinity of MO-:lroe, known ' lD 1742 as
"Chesecouk,r.
At the .t lme of the signing of.the
Declaration of Ipdependence, Claudius Smith ' was a
tall, well-built young man, already famous for h18
daring horsemanship and reckless ways. Depending
upoa who 18 telling of his escapades during the next
three years of his life, Smith- was a Tory, a bandit,
a Robin Hood, a -good neighbor. lie and b18 ban<:!
. were notor1ous for the swift and thorouglJ raids on
the homes of colonial patriots, looting and sometimes burJl1ng caches of supplies. Smith himself
was never accUsed ot murder, although it is probable that many were committed in hies name. ,Be
\
ranged from Monroe to Hackensack, and from Chester
to Suffern, bedevilling 3,l!d)l!!-NISs1.ng colonial trogas .
~d destrQlo:ing their supply lines.
He was fifially
captured . iii ong IsIalid, . r rned to Orange County
. Sheriff Isaac Nicoll.. and han ed in Goshen New York
\~January~ 1779.
A newspaper account in 1779 tells of ,the murder
of 'a man named John Clark who lived m the mO:L'ltalns Dear Stet1ing Ironworks. ' The murder was reve~~ for the hanging of Claudius Smith.
A note
pinned to the Yict1m's chest demanded t481 other
members of Claudius' gang be released as "w~ are
determined t9 pursue it on your heads and leaders
to the laSt, till the whole of you are murdered."
The note was signed "Richard Claudius".
Approximately the same time, a co~ederate of
Claudius Smtth was captured and questioned about
the murder. The confession of William Cole denies
any guilt ' in the murder wlille acknowledging his
participation in the ' looting .and robbing throughout
, ~be countrySide. He incriminates others by his statements ',' one Henry Mc"Manus, w,ho h3.d ~ haunts
near Stirling" rob~ a certain Llghtb.01y" •••and •• "1
went to the Muse of James Babcoc~ at Stirling,
and from there to Pompton Plains, and ' from there
to New York." Cole had as mamc,ars of his group
Thomas Ward, John Everett, Jacob Ackner, Jeames
Cowen, Thomas Harding, David Babcock, James Twaddle, Martinus Lawso:1, ;John Mason. Whether the
group. was truly owosed to Ame'rtcan independence,
as seems to be the case with , Claudius Smith, or
whether they were Simply taking advantage of the
times to line their own pockets !s a conjecture whl«h
cannot be decided either way.
But except for these , few who chose the life at
lawlessness, the people Of Orange Co~ty were loyal
to the patriots. The 1846 HIstory of Orange County
lists those from this area who -reported to Goshen
to enlist for military seryice, and letters from bol;h
Townsend and Erskine detail the difficulties In meeting
Continental Army requests for mtlliary supplies because of the shortage of manpower at the IrODWOncs.
The men were .in the Continental Army. Wblle Washington's troops were besIeged in New Jersey, the Orange
coUnty patrlo! Militia marched to Hackensack and
attacked Britis~ forces there to relieve the colonials.
In 1779, Aaron Burr visited the Ramapo Mountains
00 a tour of tbe Ironworks. Since Burr was a man
who enjoyed a hUJIloro'JS situation, the story of his
visit has beeo kept alive tor our enjoyment in bh;
nTheStory of . Greenwood 'Lake"
8
sented Orange County iIi the New York. State Legi~­
lature, and his adJ?iration for the countryside was
often . displayed in le~rs to his daughter urging
her .to leave the "sulphurous city air" and retreat
to the II sweet clime, of t~e' Ramapo "Mountains."
memoirs. After a long ride to steriing, his horse
was tired, and Burr needed a fresh mo:mt. Only
a mule was available, and he consented to continue
the journey on the animal. The mule, however,
had other ideas and bolted •• :stralght down a shallow
mine shaft. Burr and the mule emerged from t.he
shaft, both the worse for the ride 8,Ildeach'determ:'.ned to have his own way. Aaron Burr won out••••
but later was often to tell the story, saying he had
.lo>Jt the battle. The trip was torture to Burr's tem. per, and to his anatomy. Aaron Burr later repre-
The COffi_mtinityDevelops
When the American Revolution ended, General George .
Washington 'marched his vic~orious troops down the
Continental Road througb Dutch Hollow••••• over Mount
Zindle (or Mount Peter as we know it), and down
Jarmain Road ••••• acr.o ss to Penaluna .Road and up to .
the Big S.••••(Old Tuxedo Road) •••• ~on this old log
road predecessor "to Route 210, he took his troops
south to QraJlge Turnpike and down to New Yqrk City.
Life in DUtch Hollow waS better than when 'the first
Dutch settler artived- almost one hundred years before. Homes ~ad replaced those first crUi!rftuts.
Farms stretched all the 'way from ,the Smitli-famUy
farm lIt Monroe to the Big S, w~eb was the main , 'toad to the mi~~s. As the years 'passed neighbor
was ,no longer independent of neighbor, ~d a need
for a community, with all its implications, was felt.
School, ChUl'ch, ' General Store._•• all these were to
eventually be a part of Dutch Hollow.
, WUliam Fitzgerald's farm, some 200' acres on·
the Warwick-Monroe boundary • line, became the site
at. the first cemetery for the growing community.
The stones which are stm visible from the Monroe
Road are so old that, the inscriptions on them are
worn smooth. Perhaps this cemetery is all, that remains of that first Dutch Hollow settlement. .The
first school was nearby, but its history, goes so far
back iJito an~qu1ty, there are-no written records of
it. Per~s , they -were buried with the primative,
one-room building which surely' succumbed to pro-"
gress. B!illt in the meadows of Dutch Hollow the .
school foundations are presUmed t-o be buried ~der
the New Monroe Road, near the Whispering Pines
campground,
'
By the 179.o's, tax assessment records reveal a
little more about the people of the Dutch Hollow
area. The tax rolls of "pUblic houses and tavaros"
show that stepben Bertholf \ "kept Tavern" in the
lake valley. 'Farms near the town line were O'Wlled
by thl! Galloways, No!>les. and the-·M1Jlers. .Wb.etber
or not tbis "Noble" was related to the Nobel famUy
of Sterling is not readily mowll; the dlfference in
spelling may be only a clerIcal er~r. James Smith.
Jr. lived in Dutch Hollow. according to early Orange
COWlty records, and Jonathal;l Hallock not only lived
near the ·town line, he is also listed as having been
employe~ at Sterling M!nes and Furnaces.
'
.
Actual employee- records from tile ster.ling Furnace operation, :although they do nOt reveal the place
.of resIdence. I1st many names which are familiar to
us today.
BesIdes Jonathan Hallock. there were
Jac;ob- Belcher, Obediah Hunt, David Babcock, John
Hall, .Tohn conklin(g), Thomas Degraw. John Demer-est, Wlliiam Fitzgerald, David Garrison, Redmond
Jennings. Thomas Morgan, and James W!llson. This
l.lst.was one of 1792. 'By 1821. David Ball and Daniel
Hall- would also, be inclu.ded in the hundred or so
.name!> listed. At the Long Pond furnace just south
of t~e lake.. there would be, along with Conklin. Degraw. 'M organ ana WilSon, the nam¥ of John Finnegan. Martin' H;md. James Montross. George Ryer'Son, James· storms, and Nelson Wright One of·the
ear)1est ,maps of the, ~1ning area shows that the road
'.' trom ,.Long Pond to sterling Lake is named "Sayer
',Rol!.d".
'
.,
These names oceuI; ~. and again in records;
Dewspaper account and legal descriptions. One of
the earliest legal . d$itions. quite casual to tOday's
way of doing t-mngs. is the one given for that first
D~ Hollow .school d1s:tr1ct
n.own as the "To'W!l
or ~ School District No~ 20. Long. OIl SChW '
it gives tile loeatlOii «'the - ehOol "-on tlii road"
. aDd the · boundaries .' -as. ;'lnciudlng J. Fltzge;ald, along the road to Stephell Bertholf. then inciudlng
,~e , house on the z::tse to stirling (sic) Mountain. then
to and including Radner Jennings and Teachman, then
along the Jerse-y line to Warwick Mountain then
along that mounWn including the valley ·to the be-
Wilson 'and the ew.
eth<>41St~Ep1aCQP.al
~ OQd"Lake was bunt
Sunday 3l£ernoon.
Reverend , J. H. Calyer was Pastor, in 1907, and
in 1926 Reverend Glenn Cornall formed '~hefirst
Boy Scout troo:>. Mr. Wilbur Chrtstm31l was a scout
in that first troop. But the church congregation grew
smaller and smaller. Some ~ime. a1te 1935".the-Jrast.
services ,were held and- e oors were closed '
, 1m, . ch1ire doors opened t again; but-this
time the buUding was an areade-amusemP.nt center.,
When this business' closed. the one-time church re- ·
mained empty for many years. By 1970 i it had:)ecome "The Store, Antiques o~d and 'new!' Very few ·
structural ~hanges have ever been made in the building. and ott is not hard to imagine ·It a.; .it once must
havebeen••••• lofty ceUings and long wmdows: ••••• and
BUIiday worshippers crossing the threshQlo. There..
, are no such vivid _ rem1nders of the first ehurch
in Dutch Hollow.
'(
~he Dut:ch· Hollow school was rememtll!red very
a.ffectionat,~ly by at least one pers03.
Horatio Nelson ' Gar~er. one . of the only school teachers, who
felt such close tIes with the school that he wrote a,
,poem al1l)ut it. In his later years. the poem and a
broehnre, . complete with. ~wo pictures, were tied together -with a neat green dbbon and dedicated to
"Mrs. H~ie Zindl~ Posten."
Mr. Gardner's poem was sincere and typically
VictOrian:
OLD SCHOOL - OLD PAL
~Dem old school of forty years ago
Qose by tile creek where water cresses grow,
Your old door may be crooked, . '
Your windows out of line,
But to me, old pal. you're, beautiful and divine.·
The old benches and blac"board, you know
Where we rrwde-fu;my faces of each other long,ago.
Your old style may be humble,
- . , /
. . Your rooms may be small,
,
But to mO
e, old school, you're the dearest pal of all.
.
-/
And now, in your golden sunset days
You would have me stop and rest upon my way~
- And after forty years from you, old school ,
.
, I am glad to stop and rest
On that old familim door stone
With you old pal, as your happy guest.
;-
DUTCH HOLLOW CEMErERY-Viewof the cemetery.i~ .Dutch Hollow,.by the New Monroe Road. ' The dense, overwas cleared by Orange & Rockland U-tlhtles work crews In the Spring of 1974. A nevI'- power-line will
~~~~~~~bery
Dutch 'Hollow
In, Dutch Hollow. some-joe el$s was very happy•••••
and making others, very happy tOol WhUe Civil War
, battles ,were being f9ught as close by as Gettysburg,
g1nn1n"'''
.
.
PellIlSylvama. Dalitel K~l1y's busJpess was tlourishF~k maps and records. we bow that R.'idner'
mg. On a part of his large acreage in Dutch Hollow,
Jennings lived somewhere on the mountains _on the
Dan Kelly had buUt a distillery. -He kept metie.ulous
East .Sh9!'e.as the- road to the mine- on that side
records concerning his buSiness, for the government
is called "Jennings Hollow Road", _but th~ "house
exacted its share of all his output. a tax of twenty
on the rise to Stirling Mountain" remains a inyscents,. 0'3 each gallon of. whiskey a:\St1lled.
'
~~ "
03
lIie~
asJlot
De.W~.,JLWas one f the
,
Tlle..t.ax
Even mQrec~ual is the description for "Town
first taxes Iev..led by the..Eederal. Government In the
of Warwick SchoolDlstrict No. 21. Stirling Anchory
1790's,. Alexanl!.·ar Hnmlltoo proposed this excise tax
SchOol."
It simpl~says. "conta.ln1ng all trihabito ~elp payoff the $54 million , debt incurred for the
tants of the Town ' of . Warwick, southerly of Long
American Revolution. When his proposal was passed,
Pond District...
-_It
caused a violent' re~ct1on in Western Pennsylvania
By 1820. Dlrtch Hollow stUl had no formal churcll,
where farmers who could not get their grain to market
and a travelling minister from the Presbyterian Church
comNned their excess rye grain with spring waters,
at Amity. New York, periormedmost of the religious
and stored their "grain" as whiskey;
,
ceremonies for the gr~g community.
In that
.
S1nce' these farmers were lllmo.st .totally without
year, from_ the; records of .Rev. WUliam Tlmlow is
ready cash. whiskey was used in. its plac,e to purchase
the entry. "marrted ,28 March. · 1820; Mr. D~el
every single necessity of life which they themse'tves
Rierson -of Long Pond to MIss Hester Burr" also
'C9uld not raise. Farmers were outrage\! when the
"m:u;rled 3 May 1821 at -Long Pond, M.:-. MUler to
G-overnment demanded a CASH tax for .eac b keg disMiss Terhoon." . Services were hel~ ' in the one
,tm~d. The farmers did Dot receive "cash" for their
room schoolhouse, and it. was not untlI 1850 when
. whlSltey. they traded it or goo?s and supplles. Furthe second Dutch Hollow Sehool was bunt ' by the
thermore. there W3S no tax OIl land which would place
brook near -the Paul, Lehman property that a sepa burden on the E3st;eril landow(ler~ who were running
arate building for a church was considered. A few
,the Federal Governmtmt. Those who were. able to sell
y~s later, a MethOdIst Church was bunt Just down.
their graIn ~ the market,. or converted for sale as
~ road at the Blesch property. ' The community
bread, were Bot being taxed. Worst of all. one fourth
had grown.
of the entire nation's sWls were located' in Western
Pennsylvania. : Tbey would be paying off most of the
Reverend J. H. HawxhurSt was associated with
the first Methodist Church.' and for over My seven
entire nation's w.ar del5t. It was unfair. they d~ided,
year~ the Church was neverwlthout a ,'pastor in
an·j actio::!.J against , the tax collectors grew !ne're and
charge of regular services. The location of the.
more Violent. It culm1nated in the first ' challenge to
Chu:rch was changed, however. In 1898.. a ~ot of
the authorfty of the newly-form-ed Federal Govern'- land on. ,the roa~L to, .rel:sey~~ dOllate
1, .a ",. '.. _ !l!~~t_ ~itJ!~
~. ~rp~
11!'r-§ln~
,kil?'!Wl
~ the "Whtskey
. '
.
.
... ... ..
. .. . :.. . ..
.."" ••:.
.."
4.-~ "'~""
Rebeillon"..
Bu!the Government sent in troops; the,
tax of whiskey remained. . ,
The whiskeY tax did not much bother Dan Kelly.
He had an ideal location; his d1st1llerY as at the
~enter . of DutchJIollow and front
on a ' toll.l'oaa.
'- The toll statton. which wo:J1d become t1le WInkler home
in ou.r tlme. · burned :loW+! a few years ago. It was on
Kelly's corner on Old Dutch Hollow Road.
The travellers mtl;;t have been thirsty. In December 1862. Daniel 'Kelly paid the gOVernment seVenty
two dollars (or o~y five days of work. The rest of
the money earned from distilling over three hundred
gallons was all his. '
,
~
He . uSed some ~f the. pro!1ts irom the d:tstnllng
to set up a general store across the road at Penaluna,and Dutch Hollow Roads. The store was a meet-'
ing place' for everyone. Kp.lly carried' items such as
dried ::>eans In burlap sackS, barrels of. tlom'- -and
sugar. hu.,aoe slabs · of smolted bacon and salt pork.
tubs, of butt.e r. great roUllds of cheeses under isbiglass covers.. crocks of pickles~ · ruirdware items and
yard goods. (Records of the Kelly business were
found by Russell Welchman when he -and his wife
moved into the buUding a few years ago.)
But as Dan Kelly prospered. little seeds of discontent grew within him. Wily .share. the profits with
the Federal Governmeut; he resented paying the tax
Oil whiskey. Unlike the farmet'Sof Western Pennsylvania, Dan ,did not openly rebel; he began to bootleg. He would load his l>'.Ickboard wago::!. with barrels
'of whiskey h1dd en by a covering of corn. stalks and
after dark he would set out fOl: Gosben with two
strong horses pulling tlie heavy load, He sold bis
wlli;skey easUy, and!cept a1J. the money for blniseUo'
To c,over up these clandestine sales. Kelly began
to :Ioctor the b'Qoks.
This want on for mo.lths and
months. Was he careless in keapin,g his records?
.~
~ -"
"
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.......--. . .
~"'\.
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..
10
Story -of -G:reen wood . La·k e·" .
.
Was he spotted by a tax.co.llecto.r o.n o.ne of his · "mldnight" rides to. Goshen? Or .did so.me upstanding
citizen info.rm the <?fi1c1als of-Kelly's pursuit o.f unWe do not know the answer to
taxed affluence?
these questions.' Ho.wever. the go.vernment" suddenly
descended and abruptly put him o.ut o.f the dlstUlery business.
Around 18_80. business at the general sto.re .was ·
not do.ing to.o. well elther. The populat~o.n had begun
to. mo.ve' fro.m Dutch Ho.llo.w to. the area around the
lake. By 1882. even the school was'-JIloving to. "the
ro.ad to. Jersey." Kelly finally clOsed the sto.re tn.
the late 1880's and so.ld a1! hts pro.perty. The sto.re
ts · no.w a ho.me; o.n the fo.undatio.n ro.ckfo.i' Russell
Welchman's fro.nt porch (o.nce the entrance way to.
the o.ld co.untry sto.re) are , chisled the 1n1tials o.f Dan
Kelly's three children•••••one o.f the few remamin'"
traces o.!
in the. Old Dutch Ho.llo.w co.:nr.a;),llty:
One other name o.f the Dutch Ho.llo.w area has
been recorded in Orange Co.unty histo.ry. Willlam
M• . Co.llard. son of MaryE. Hallo.ck · Co.llard. was
'born in . Dutch Ho.llo.w In 1857. Willlam's father
owned a farm where William wo.rke.d after attending the Dutch Hollo.w ,schooi. iii 1908. Co.Ilard O)\'lled 200 acres o.f land in Greenw!)o.d Laknhic~
life
\
'
co.ntained . a fine ' grade
. of mica. He had hopes
of opening a mine. . Nothing else'was w~en on
this subject. and Co.llard
fades from the sto.ry just '
as the thriving Dutch Hollo.w co.mmunityfades. The
center of co.mmunity life
moves so.uth ana 'the Village of Greenwood Lake
begins to. fo.rm.
It is not surprising that "
people began to. mo.ve to.
the sho.res o.f the lake.
Thro.ugh9ut histo.rY; pop.ulatio.n shi1ts- have taken
place acco.rding to. econo.mic ehanges Q.l an area.
People Ifo.llo.w when jo.bs
and transportatlo.n · are
availab~e.
Or . when they
see an opportun1tyto.· better their financial ' position.
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~EA:r PRI~ES-This 1897 bill from a butcher 'in Chester, New York, gives exampl~
of prices at that time, Ham at 1~ ceiltupount was almost eq~al to 8,ologna at 12 .
cents a pound. But beefwaa seiling at 10 cents a pound. The Good Old DaysI'
an
The home of the .Russell Welch mans,which was once Dan Kelly's store . .
•
I
•
A 'Change In Name
/
In 1836, th~ namoS- "Gre,l!l1w\)001 ,L ake" appe'lrs ' 01)
the reco.rds. Thts, was the year that Jaco.~ M.. Ryerson, Wllo. o.wned the Ringwoo1 Iro.:l Estates. m?,je llJl
agreement with: the M(.:-rts Canal Co.mpany fo.r a dam
to. be built acro.ss the southern tip o.f Long Po.nd. This
dam waS to. supply water fo.r transportation o.f barges
. fro.m the mInes and furnaces to' the river, and fro.m _
there to. Newark. The dam J~a1sed the wat~rs o.f the
lake by t,w-alve feat an,j crtlaiedthe 'E ast, W9St a::11 ,
No.rth . arms o~ the lak~~ M:my tr;lcts ·o.f land w.e re
flo.~ed.
This explains so.mewhat the mystery of
many ·o.ld deed which even to.day stlll , read "to. the
mid,He of the broo:{ or ·the. c~nter o.f the lake iI.; the
case mll'.y be." Wnen the dam was built. the lake
waters covered many o.f the o.ld boundary lines
, No. · ~eal reaso.n ~everbeen given fo.r the change
of naJIlC; from Lo.ng .Po.nd to. "Greenwood Lake". One
possible explanatio.n is that ' like the Greenwoo1 -Mine
and Furnace, m':'.Dy miles away near" Arden. New
Yo.rk. the . lake was naJIled after the beautiful green
tree.s which surro.unded it. . Regardless o.f the reaso.n, Greenwoo.:i Lake ts . the nam.1 which soon became . famous fo.rits serene beauty. healthful clim!.'.te. plentiful fish and gam~. and m3g'nificent homes
e
and resorts. .
A few years ' before 'the Civil War, a yo.ung man
came to. Greenw~d Lake to. recover his health.Jas- '\
per F. Cro.psey ~araed with 'a Mr. Cooley who.' lived
on the New Jersey end o.f dreenwood Lake. Cro.p'Ei(id~nce Jhai Greenwood Lake's waters hay/! been da~med more than one is ~upplied by this photo of a smaller
sey's reco-iery was very slo.w.. and to. pass the time,
dam Just nearby the watershed dam. ,
. '
.
he painted many scenes o.f his beautiful surro.undfJigs.
One beautiful autumn landscape shows how Greenwood Lake would have lo.oked fro.m the shores of
Rocky Po.fJit at the time of ,the· CivllWar. A man in
cemetery. the last resting place fo.r the m~:l~l'$ WilO
do.wn tht'OJgh ~he valley. fro.:n Lakeville at the foo~ .
blue unifo.rll) is seen in orie of the bOats gliding. paace!:>l'o::.lght up iron fro.m 'deep within the earth, children
of sterling Lake to. Sterlingto.n Junctio.n., eight mUes
fully o.n the water.' The paintIng- ts titled simnly
who.se llves had barely begun. men and women. who.
away. Here it co.nnected. wIt}l the Erie Railroad fo.r
"Greenwo.od Lake. New York." .
. .
•- •
first settled in the wilderness o.f thls area. soldiers
dtrtlct access to. the ciUes 0:1 the Eastern seabord.
Cropsey's wo.rk ,~ not imm~d1ately aw..rectated
Spur 'lines ' from sterling Lake went to. tbe mines.
, fro.:n o~r nation's early wars. '
in the United· States. Hemart:1ed his host's daughter.
- . The Ster11ng Fo.rest cemetery. in the T9wn o.f
Parts of this railro.ad can still be seen to.:iay.
Maria Cooley, ,and the two. -went to. England; where·
Warwick was establlshed in early 1800. TM..oldest
k few feet I>ayond the resto.red tIlrnace at Ster11ng
his paintings were exh1~ited.- Jasper Cro.psey rereadlble grave marker ts dated ,1813'.- Many of the
:
Lake.
on
the
l~tt. ts a narrow winding ro.ad through
turned to. Ame1'1ca a famous painter• . He later bullt
headstones are just ~hat - flat sto.nes from the nearby
·t he valley. Just above the b\Ulks of the stream 1s
a mansio.n o.n--the Warwick mountainside. Today. his
fo.~~st that mark the head or the grave. and a sm~ler
an ,o.ld · rail bed. On ~~ch sid·~ o..~ tha ro.:ld 'ire the
landscapes of the area"are co.llecto.rs' -item:; . -'
sio.n'il to. IMrk the foot. ' Even-those headsto.nes which
sto.ne fo.undatio:1s to. rerilin:i us o.f the little com·~
4bout the same time as Mr. CrOpsey cam~ to.
came fro.m a monum~nt works are starkly simple in
m1mity which surro.unded the furnace area in the
Greenwood ,Lake. the Townsends' decided to. o.ffer
.design. Butwiiat o.rnateness is lac~ in the sto~e
1850's. , The Sterling An,cbory Scho.:>l. Sco.ttChurch.
their stex:ling iro.n estates fo.r sale al!d a nine-page
ts more than mwe up fo.r In some of the mscrtp..
homes. a sto.re••.•• all are go.ne and large weeds grow
brocbure~ co.mplete with maps. was printed fo.r cir-'
tio.ns. Some poignantly eXpress the grief of losing
where o.nce. there w~re-floors. The sto.ne fo.unda.culatton throughout business circles. The brochure
a 10.ved one:
tio.nsare favorite hiding' places fo.r .'snakes. and vtsi.:.
offered 23.000 acres: fro.m the New Jersey lin~ to.
to.rs should remember to. be very cautio.us if explo.rMt. ;Bashen Lake in Mo.nroe. and from Greenwood ,
ing.
These moss-covered fo.lBld-atio.ns and the rosty
Lake (about Echo. Rock) to. -the Ramapo Creek in
tracks ~.and as sUent sentinels of days lo.ng past.
"Faithful friend, a mother dear
Tuxedo. It would be purchased by Jay Cooke and
Abo.ut two and a half mUes beyond Sterling FurA tender mother lieth here.
partners just fiv~ y~ later and the name wo.uld
nace.
-at
'the
first
uphill
road
on.Qle
right
ts
the
enbe changed to. 4lster~g Iron and Railway Co.mllaDY." Great it the grief that we sustain .
trance to. a smsll sun-warmed clearing. Here in '
,The sterllng Mo.untain Rafiway was bullt under this
.
But
1rope in heaven to meet again." .
...
..-: . . . . . ~. ~ . ., . ~.-.
name• • WInding' its ' cony' way if<iiigstd~ " the- 'broolf" ,<-. • ~ ~~ess pt ~~~J:i~~ .,.f,~e..~ M.,. l! c ~e}~I~~
~.
"
12'
"The St,qrYo.f Gre,enwood: Lake"
This dam at the sout-hern end' of Greenwood Lake controls the flow'into Wanaque Reservoir.
..' ...:
'ADother seems, 'almoEJtglad to be rid ,ol his earlhlY
woes:
"
.
,"While ,on earth 1 did remain,
,FiUed withsorroiiJ, grief and pGin
, >
Adieu, my/riends andfoesliliewise;
My journey is beyond the skies. J;
And 'i'h?d poss!ble rejoinder could there be to the
truth 01 the statement:
,
"Death is a debt to naiure 'due
Which! have paid,
, And so must you. "
- One ,.fam11y plot, embrilcedby simple 1ron pipes
run through concrete posts, holds the llooored dead
from the generations of one family which fought in the
Civil War, Spanish-Ame,r ican War, World War I and
World War n.. The most recent, gra~e in the cemetery, dated 1945, is that 01 the World -War n soldler.
Many of the gravesites are discerniQle olily: by, a
deep cavity in tile earth, A few are guarded only by a
large rounded field stone, - now almost obscured by
undergrowth, 'After the mines were abandoned, the
miners and thelr families left the company commun;,.
ity. As the , hOU$es crumbled beneath the onslaught
of the 'elements, so the cemetery once again became
part at ·,the forest. Seedung trees and bushes greW
thick arqund, the stones. " Until 1969, all traces Of the
cemelery were lost,
.
"
.
.
SQrVeyors from ,the Sterling Forest Management
Corporation stuinbled upon the forsaken cemetery while
looking for sites for future developinent~ It was
brought to the attention 01 the Warwick Town B9ard,
and Town Counctlman Harry Sudman (deceased) was
asked to investigate,the !!1tuatlon. Mr. Sudman, Doting
the graves of veterans buried there, adv1sed the Town
Road Department to reclaim tbe cemetery; trees and
saplings were cut down, brush and undergrowth cleared
out, and headstones righted or straightened as beSt as
possible. It was, once again, the sacred sancturary
it was meant ,toW.
,
W1th1n a few years, the peacetulness of this simple
place was destroye;d by the tragic symbol 01 the per- '
m1ssive yeli!'s: vandal1sm., Headstones were pushed
over, small markers uprooted and strewn- about, and
. the area littered -with beer canS, bottles, torn mattresses, empty fUel cans.
The cemetery Is now fenced off to protect it from
roving bands and desecration is at a minimum. . The
walk :to the ~emetery is about 500 feet from ~e road.
. A bouqUet .of bright flowers on a small · child's grave
'would serve notice ,that we are not about to ,abandon
this fin31 resting place to vandals and forest. A small
flag for a ' soldier's grave would help to keep this bit
01 our past from. being lost again.
A' "N'oble, Stot:y"In 1813, W1l11aril NoNe, son 01 Abel Noble 01 sterling
Furnace fame; secured a -patent from the state of New .
York for 870 acres 01 land on th,e west shore 01 Long,
Pond; The land was accessible to _the famUyhome in
Bellvale by means ,01 a log road which ran from Bell- vale to the odge of the mountain oVerlooking the lake.
From there, a patJfled to the headwaters of a brook on
the property. It was at the foot 01 this brook that Noble
bU!lt an lrori-works furnace in 1833.
,
It was an inauspiciOUS time for new buSlDess ventures.
President Andrew Jackson had vetoed the
charter .l'ene.wal .of the Bank of the UnitEid states, and
the resulting over-speculation by financiers in, land,
eanaisand railroads caused ,a financial panic, followed
by a business depression. The Noble Furnace did not
fare too well. Whether it was a lack 01 money or jUst '
poOr .Judgment is not knoWn, One opinion is that the '
brook either dried up or was never large enough to
suPPly ,the power needed for the furnace.' There are
no records of iron being sUccessfully produced, and
the furnace was closed in 1846.
TodaY, -only the ruins are standing, less than onequarter 01 the size of the original furnace. It is this
"Noble ruin" which accounts for th-e name of ODe of
.the largest residential sections . in Greenwood Lake
, ....Furnace Brook. Between Abel Nobel's time-.and the.
date. 01 th~patent to Wll11am, the spelling on documents had been altered to "Noble."
PAttNT
fIIS."'O AeRtS
t;le4 , • .,
'L.AKE
,~
(Not drawn to scale) All identiiications~-except those in brackets, !lre'on the original map.
.
.
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,
'
This,.the third dam acrossureenwOod Lake created
a Water shed.
The We,s t Shore
. 'NEW VOlt( STAlE
J,
The storage dam in 1765 was needed for water power for
Long Pond Furnace. The.dam in .1836 supplied water for
transportation by barges. It was thi~ dam which raised
the lake water ~y 12 feet.
.
,
FOr thirty years, the Noble patent was not developed.
It was the NORTHERN end 01 Greenwood Lake which
was the hub olactivlty. Advertisements 01 that era '
deScribe the scenic beauty of the
and tell 01 the
area
wel1-appomteabotels which catered to sportsmen and
vacatfnntm1\l
'
18'75, e New ork, O.swego and Midland ailextended ffiilD service to the NID'/ Yor -New
Jersestate line
\tie east shore of lhe lake. A depot was Dilllt now the location 01 T. Ci7s Tast , and
Sterling Forest statlon.which was the "end of the
line", . became the "beg1nDiilg" 01 a pleasant vacation
for many city-weary people.
OIle man had dreams 01 continuing the railroad along
the east shore and out through Dutch Hollow to Middletown. Mr. G~en Burt was a Bellvale res1deot, born
there In, 1822 and orphaned at 14. In 1859, he and a
group 01 WBrwlck businessmen organized the Warwick
Valley Rallroad, later to become the LebJgb and Hud- ,
SOIl River Railroad. . He se ad as ~daIlLof the
com~y; for fortY years.
1dr. Biii't was an astute
essm~
a genUllie apprec1at1oll for the beauty
01 the mountains and valleys which' surrounded his
birthplace.' About l870
combined dlIs business
talents and his d~ in the~celceolGreeuwOOd
Lake }Jy~ "Ameifean.l'.rossachs Trip"
sbIiIlar to the ..one-"d~ Jghtseefng excurs10Ds in
'Scotlan<lto view the Highlands scenen'o
Burt's "dream 01 fUrther extension 01 the railroad was
never realIZed; it remained' a one-track road wltb a
turntable to reverse the engine for the southerly trip.
A survey for the extension was made and filed in
18'77 in GoShen,- N.Y., but construction was never be~.
However, Iru!, actfv1ties contributed greatly to
the renown and development 01 Greenwood Lake and
.. others soon became aware of .its natural splendor.
The "History of Or3nge County," 1881, by E. M.
Rutenber--describes a gentleman'S_club under trustees
Qlcott, Daggett, Vernon, Cooke and Roe as the "Greenwgpg . Lake Associ~lQn. oy;anlzed jnJ 871 for tJie
preseiT.itJ.on
ro ~ation .of b1rd~ ~ animals,
and fislles ad!ll!.te<l to the c Imate,. and to afford facUlties for llunting, shOoting, fishing on the ground thereOf oy members, RrOVidfiig an agreeable resort, reSRectable hotel or- club house" was available for the
' memberS'. TIre Associatlo,! purchased a portion of
land from fhe Noble tract which extended from about
the present-day Woodlands to the New Continental
'.
~,. .~~~~ .~~~;'e-¢.."""::'~~~.-l"'~""~~»~'t-,~... ~ ~~~''''''''''''':;::t"k",''",-;"'-t''~~.......'-:;..~...,.~..~,-~~,-. . . . :....~...:......... ~~-~~~,, ,~~':.: ,.~.~........:..~-v~~~ ...~- '~"'''~~A)~~~'-':~
I
"
"The Story of Gree n wo'od . La
, ke"
14
Restaurant.
Tbe Greenwood Lake Association "clubhouse" was
a magn!ficent building on .the cUff overlooldng the
.lake. and quite as awe-inspiring as the mountains which
formed its backdrop. Within a decade; the Association
continuin ..,Mr...-HQrt's prom,<rtion ~Feai' as
the accompanying illustration shOWS, it had widened
its. intere$ beyond those of only the sportsmen. _The
elUbhouse...,-krtown' as' e ' erncllff, ·was :advertised· as a
"hotel in t e griiidmanner. ~A building near the
road was devoted to- the accomodation of the guest's
chauffeurs. The Femcl1ff was successful frorh the
very begimiing. .
'.
In 1922, FerncWf-was purchased by Mr. Thomas
Pitt, Sr., who did some remOdel1,ngbefore the season
opened in 1923. In that summer, while most hotel
guests were relaxing on the beach, a huge thunder
cloud rolled acroSs the. lake.,. Newspaper stories tell
of a great bolt ofl1gbtning which Struck the hotel roof
. setting fire to the upper story. Within minutes, the
entire structure was in flames; and Ferncliff burned
to the ground. An the guests escaped the terrible
fife, J::!utmany had. only the clothes they were wearing.
The Pitt family remained in the hotel business ..; not
in the opulent style. of the Femcl1ff ..: Dut't1ft!"'Chauffeur's res~dence' later became comfortable efficiency
units under the name of Greenwood Lake Motel and
Cotbiges. Within recent years, this building has been
added .to and is now Jmownas the Cork and Bottle,
owned by Mrs. Alice White.
.
But Ferncllff and the Greenwood Lake Association
were not . the only names connected with the west
_ shor
An 1881 brochure des~ribes the "Wawayanda _
oUrer tea _ gentf'eClub , t Shep~
men Of New York" as a "bllndso e c u 5liouse on
The Noble Furnace around 1870.
the West S ()re" . and a maP of ~he Noble patent shows
a eEl was filed for Nicholas llihaU and the
Gentleman's Club of Wal'W'la?WOO<nanas . -a location
about _ arterof'"a , mU :solitIi 9'tbe'present Woodlands.About 1880, a snmmer school of ,Christian philOSOphy 'under William 0;: McDowell was begun in
auditorium " erected for that purpose at Warwick,
Wooi:Ilands.~' The "History of Orange County,. 1908"
by R. Headley; d<>es not give-the location of this auditorium, but tells of .ianencampment hotel for the
accomooation of visitors which was under the supervision of Lyndon Y. Jeones." Speakers on religious,
social and philosophiCal themes were .invited, and it
-was the center of interest and activity at Greenwood
Lake for many years. We are told that lack of financial support caused this schOOl to be discontinued and
the buildings abandoned to the nses and amusements
of excursionists. In 1906, it was demolished.
While this enterprise was f.;llling, others in the
jmmediate vicJn1ty wer.e flourishing. Many hotel guests
of that era stayed for the entue summ~r, 3J!d the Erie
Railroad which DOW operated tlJe linetosterUngForest,
New Jersey, published brochures as early as 1881
advising their riders of the two U. S. Post Offices at
Greenwood Lake where' tbey could receive.their mail.
One was at,the nort!lem end of the lake, aDd the other,
-a summer post office, was,at "Center, N.Y." and usually called the Midlake post office. It was located in
the Woodlands Hotel (the present. location) until 1914,
when Jim Co~ell purchased the property.
When JiIIl. Counsell :first came 'to Greenwood Lake,
storms Island was one of the well-publicized resorts
of th~ area:. Tbe island had once b~n a hilltop on the
farm owned by the Storms family, .who were descendNoble Furnace - 1974
agts of' the original Indian tribes. The land was
flooded .in' 1834 when tbe dam was built at Ringwood
the GreenWood Lake Terrace company, a real estate, rides on the property being operated by aMr. Ryerson.
Furnace, and the .. ~'billtop" was separated from the
land development corpox:atton had purchased the-part
This was also moved, to a hollow near the present home
mainland_by the waters of the lake'which were being
of. the Noble tract now knowDas Inc:U.aD Park. .AdVer- .
of Dr. Samuel Schlossman.
held bac!k to provide the water when needed to float
tisements throughout the 1930's were for "building
Jim Counsell was greatly interested in boats, and
barges for the Morris CaDal Company•
plots"· instead, of the sumptuous hotels of,the turn-ofespecially in boat racing. He built the Tipperary, and
. GU¥is for the storms. Island hotel were met at the
the-century times. With the ,repeal of Prohlbition,
when Jake Deer moved to Greenwooo Lake, he and Jim
mainland and _taken across the water by boat to this
many .hotels con-'~ertecL.m
dining rooms mto ar
equipped the Tipperary With a Buick automobile engine
farm-turned-resort. This is how Mr; Counsell Viewed
..and,Erllls, JlDd continue<t.operatioDs witb the emphasis.....
and cha:llenged other boat owners. Races were held
the properly whicb JIe ; later rented.. Although he
on this portion of the business. Guests stayed.a shorter
.from, the Woodlands dock with Jim putting upthe racing
wanted topurcbase the hotel, this was ~ot pOssible
tfm~
d
thti::) omoDUe and' better.,.roads, were
cups, and then winning them back again. .A wise inas title to the land had not been cleared•. He operated
able ·to travel from place to place. The rallro3d was
vestment! Within a few years, competition to the
the Storms Island bote! and looked for a property whicb
-, dlsconflnu~ an tile ill-m-one ~fype of resort was a
Woodlands r~ces came from a few doors away. A
he could buy. TheWai"wick Woodlands bote was
luxury to .be. found' oriIy farther north in the Catskills.
"Greenwood·Lake BOat and Country Club" was opened,
·available;. 'and he purcllas
i f ough tile HincbThe. West shore is mainly a resid~tial coiDmunitY
and their, races overshadowed those at the Woodlands
cliff Brewery holdings. While renovations were being
now. Building plots have become summer residences
for a time. But the country club insisted on "white
made at Woodlands, the .family "commuted" back and
and year-round homes. Tbe Woodlands and part of the
lackets" for men in the evening, and it was Closed
lorth between there and Storms Island with building
property was sold and is now owned by Mr. Ed Fava.
due to a lack of interest on the part of its custofuers.
m-atertals, workers,- and family' possessions.
. A fire a few years ago destroyed a portion of the buildJim Counsell then used the name (Greenwood Lake BOat
A diary of the early months of 1914 was kept by Eva
ing. It was not rebuilt, and it is now almost the same
and Country Club), assigned his guests as off1cersof
Mae Counsell, who 'W;lS later to become the mother of
size as the original buildiIlg when Jim Counsell first
the -club, ,.and was once again sponsoting races and
Mr. Robert Gallant. Mr. Gallant lent us the- diary and
saw it. Mr~ Gallant has his home and bUsiness on
winning .cups. However, when Bill HaIl beg!;lIl to enter
graciously provided much of the background material
'another' part of the property.
the races, Jim's engine could not compare to the one
and pictures for the story of the west Shore. The
ThiS, then, is the story of the West Shore - from the
. - in M-r. Hall's "Slip Along," and the cups were soon be-diary is a fasCinating, factual account of the every-day
furnace at the brook and the grand hotels, to the resiing won by competltlon outside the Woodlands. '. Jim
life of a young woman whose parents owned a hotel in
dences tha~ dot the shore and line the hills, looldngout
Counsell· discontinued the races some time after 1935.
pre-World War I times. It describes the work necesover the fong pond that. is Greenwood Lake of 1974.
Changes throughout the entire Greenwood Lake. area
sary to such an· oPeration -the cleanmg; cooking,
This is also the story of the Noble patent.
were commg faster now.. In 1929, a filed map shows
waiting on tables - but much. more than that, it tells
of shopping trips to Paterson, lvisiting of neighbors
such as the Gudewells, whose "castle" was nearby.
Life was difficult in 1914. Eva Mae's diary is exPlicit
in the amount· -of sewing and' dress- making which was
done almost every day. She describes trimmings and
materials; tucked away between two page~ is the pattem
3he refers to which had been taken from a 1914 publication. . But she also tells of the fun of living in those
times;- how every trip down to Greenwood Lake "village"
to piclti up some forgotten household item was made on
, skates .once the lake was froZen, and how every trip meant a chan<:e to visit and chat and warm-up before
the return ,trip. The diary is kept sporadically in the
first part of April as typhoid fever fells first Mrs.
Counsell, then Eva herself. , There is only one later
-- entry after the illness which, to the reader's relief,
. tells that both may be- going "hoIl)e from the hospital
soon." The rest of the diary is blank.
We know fro m Mr. Gallant's account, thathls grandfather opened the Woodlands and successfully ran it
for m311Y years. At the time that Jim Counsell moved
into the hotel, .Mr. and· Mrs. Paige, the Woodlands'
.s:aretakers· moved the POst office to itS last site before
Its clos inl!. :!. house next -doot to where Mr. Charles
llifoner is -now living. The Crow resid~ce, as it w~
mown, caught tire in May 19'14, and was c o m p l e t e l y '
, .
' destroyed, When the Woo<uand!\ became Counsell's
Repairing Woodlands. Rear, L to L, L~~ &l.NII~(}n, ~raQ.k CQ!:I~II~, Harql.q Ball, ( co ~k at ke house, unidentified),
; back 1n1914, there was a merry-go-round and other
Emmet Ball, Wilbur Conklin. Front,l :-tD~, H~7(;'j(j Cot1KTffi Sk:,\fnH!~nflfiad;-"Jake.Uee~, unidentified,
Jake
Gould.
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G~eenwood Lake"
HRNClI FF: Built by- the reenw06d Lake Association as an_exclusive 'club for sportsmen, it later became a hotel in the "grand' European manner." It was purchased by Thomas Pitt, Sr.
who operated it for a ,shon while. , It was destroyed by fire In 1923.
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Single,track along the East Shore. Storms Island is in the background.
Erie Railroad ,depot on 1he EaSt Shore, 1930.
Front page of the 1901 brochure published by the '~Greenwood Lake Association.'1
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_,Pavilion built by the Counsell family.
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Counsell's hpte! ~n Storms Island. The Trumpers lived on the Island
,wl)en WaltTrumper-W8S .two months.olds.'," , " ,•...~,, " .'< ".' .•...:.:. , , "" ' .~.
',0',
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,~·" ,_ -.GudeweU'~-,-Ca~le.a$:Seei1 fram th~e Lake (about 1911).
18
\
"The Story of Greenwood Lake"
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Storms Island store and hotel (19 10)
Woodlands Dining Ro,?m in the 1920's.
,' .
'The Waiersfone Family
/
In 1861. Edward and Martha Waterstone ~oved to
Greenwood Lake-from~ NeW"YorK City because of the ·
ill health of their son. Edward T .• who .was then 18
years Old. For ' the next seventy years, he".and ·his
Sister., Jennie. were to have-tbe most ' profound influence on the Ifevelopment of"Greenwood 'Lake.
- .. - The Wliterstones were a religious.. educafed familYi .teaching and the ministry were the principal '
professions of past generatiOns. At the -time they
made ~ir borne in Greenwood Lake. there was only
the one-room schoolhouse. almost three miles away
in Dutch HolloWi there. was no opportunity for the
family to continue in their forefathers' calling• . Mr.
and Mrs. -waterstone· purchased a two-story cottage
on the east shore of Greenwood Lake~ The cottage
had once been a lodge and bar. notorious for the
boisterous behavior of its patronS. TheWaterstones
oPElnd the upper story as a . boarding house and
formed the bar iiltO a sedate parlor:
Mrs • .Waterstone- was 'a very pious gentlewoman.
aDd sorely missea the solace and comfort 01 regular ..
Church services. , Within a Uttle while. she opened .
her parlor .on Sunday evenings for informal singing
Waterstone c..ottage as it appeared dlfing the early
1900's. The tent pitched on the side is reminiscent
of the earlier tent raised on the lawn for church services in 1880.
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were interested and. on · a fine , Sunday' afternoon in
1880. clergymen from New York. Jersey City, and
~ontclair assisted in the dedication ceremoIlli!s of
the go~l tent. A newspaper., account of the proceedings tells of "gayly dressed young women, young
men in yachting suits, and older people in considerable number": strolling on the green expanse of lawn
before the call to prayer. The young people formed a
choir and provided music for the dedication. Rev.
Dr. Bradford conducted the first . baptismal service
and gave . the principal address in the tent which
seated 150 persons.
In 1885, Mrs. Brandon died and Miss Eleanor
Rose, a cousin ofl Jenni~ and EdwardWat~:a::sto.!le.
came to the Lake, making it her home and taking
UP the Church work. 'Money was raised to move
. the tentfr.om the lawn o! Waterstone Cottage to the
1sland known as Lime Ridge, which waS owned by
Alex·ander Brandon. M:,. · Brandon deeded the lovely
island to be used for a permanent home for a Church,
and the tent was, at first. placed on a raised plat..
form. A roof and sides were put on in 1886.-.....
Miss Rose wrote to .. many different ~ chu~hes,
services. . In. ..1-868, Mrs. W~erstone's brother-inlaw. Alexander Btandon. built the "majestic Brandon
House' to take the, oveffrow of visitors who came fo
vacation at Waterstone Cottage. Sernces "Were tbim
held In the par ors at Brandon Ifouse.
. The first real Church services were held in Brandon House during 1870•• when ministers of all 'denominations were invited to preach. After three
years. it vJas felt · that a Church building was needed,
so a bazaar was held at Waierstone Cottage to raise '
money._ The Rev. Dr. AmorY H. Bradford of Montclair joined with the Waterstones in their efforts to
establish a- permanent Church and obtain a resident
minister. But over ten years would pass before even
a foundation would'be layed, and Mrs. Martha Waterstone would not Uve to see the <ledfca:tion of the first
place of worship ever erected at GreenwOod Lake....
a new gospel tent raised on the lawn of Waterstone
Cottage in 1880.
After Mrs. W:i!,;erstone's death, her daughter, Miss
J eDDie Waterstone continued the- mm.isterlal work to
' . bring the Word of GQd to the people who lived and
summerea in Greenwood Lake. Various ministers
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Sketch of the Brandon House from a 1901 brochure.
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"The Story of Greenw,ood Lake"
. asking that one of them take the mission under its'
care.
Only the Episcopal Church responded. In
1887, the 11i-st ChristmaS services were held. conducted by Mr. Boyer, Rector In Warwick. · Two
years .J..a ter, Mr. WUl1am .. A. Dalton was sent as, missionary
to the "Free Church of StrangerS"
at Greeny.'ood Lake. He and Miss Rose worked~
gether for three years, brlDgiDg the ' number of Sunday School students from three to over eighty, organ1z:lng a vested choir,establishing the little Church
on "Chapel Island" as everyone soon ealled it.
Th
. Church of strange.1'swas incorporated
In ~ as~ of the 'Bi';otestant Ep c ld-ntoeeSe
- of New YOI'
un e1' the name liT e Clfurc
Ui'
GOod Sbep'"herd".
Rev. J. Holmes McGuiness J>ecame tile f1r~ Rector. A stone tower, choir room
and .preaching parapet were added and shrub~ry
was planted around the foundation. But the -Church
was without its own ' Parish House, although land'
had been deeded to Trustees Miss Jenn1eWaterstone, ' G~ell ' Burt, Henry 'Weir and Rev. Alfred
G<;ldsborough for Church ·purposes over twenty years
before. In 1910, on the corner of W1ndemere Avenue
and Church street, on the land deeded by Solomon Caldwell, .work was begun on a Parish House (with a'~OO
contribution and a $3,OQ!>..l<?an). , _.
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The Clmrch of the Good , Shepherd was an Integral'
part of the comnnmlty and the great. bell In the stone
towe17 on Chapel Island tolled on Sunday evening,
echOing (lown the) Bearfort, Be,llvale and Tuxedo mountains, reminding all to come worship their God.
, What had been but a vision, a yearning In the heart
of one wom-an and her famUy, had become areal1ty.
And the Church' bell called to the people·....1n the
hills, In the hotels along the lakeside, on the farms,
across ,the waters. ' In boats and canoes, on foot \
and by carriage, they , came to the little Church on
I the,island. Beneath rugged evetgreens, ' shady maples
and great oaks, In the little stone Church on Chapel
Island, they paused for a "time of ' spiritual refreshment. For over thirty ' years, the voices of the choir
were heard at each service.
But .1n J1llY of 1948, Fire! - fire with a Sudd~
and fierce destructiveness blaz€d through tlJe chapel.
Men raced to quench the ~g flames. When the
holocaust had ended, the c . l was gone. Only the
great bell, the stone tower, and-the parapet remained.
The great bell was salvaged to be placed in the tower of
The Church of the Good Shepherd, bullt on Waterstone
Road. The rubble of the stone tower stool untu A~st
. of 1967, a bleak lonely r~nder for those who remembered Chapel Island iIi its days of glory, and an
, Intriguing, .enchanting sight for those who never. knew
those days.
-,
The island became a gathering place for farge
parties of young people, trespassing, littering, disturbing the ' early morning slumber of neighbors on
the ma1n1and~ When County Legislator Victor Ludmerer purchased the islan'd, he gav~ permission to Boy
Scouts and Girl Scouts to have troop ouflngs there.
The fireworks display, given by the Volunteer Fire
Department each year to celebrate the founding of
t900-'-Vested choir of "Free Church of Strangers"
:on Chapel Island . . .
our country, has been .shot from Chapel Island for a.
long while.
In 1967, on Labor Day ev~ at sundown, the people
who came to the island, once again came witl1 the spirit
Of reveunce, to worship, to pray, to atflrm- their ~a1th.
More than eighty years after the vision was born, the
..dream fulfilled, and the ending ordained. services were
once ~ain held on a Sunday evening. Here, -til the natur,al chapel created by God's hana, the rays of the setting
sun outlined the figures of people of allfalths. Clergymen and choir memhers from the Church of the Good
Shepherd, Grace Lutheran Church, Holy Rosary R.C.
Church. and the Jewish Community Center gathered to
, give . thanks and pray for continued guidance. They
came 1»y power boats Jnstead of canoe, by automoblle
Instead of carr.1age. B~t wheg. the motors were hushed,
. their voices recreated the scenes the island had witnessed for !!lany. many y~ars:' "
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For the past few years, Mr. Ludmerer bas given
permission for the island to be used for "The BlessIng , of the Fleet" ceremony, conducted under the
-auspices of the Coast Gu:u:d AuXil1ary at the beg1rui1ng
01' each summer season.
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Ail interesting. publication concerning t.he past history of Ctiapel Island was pubUsh~d by Miss Satella
" Chapellslan,d in 1911 from II photo taken by Frank T. Welles.
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ShaTpB Waterstone In 1901~ The few copies avallable
today are In private collections; Much of the rullTation contained here is from" a copy lent to us by Mrs.
James Ryerson of th~ New MO¥oe Road. The last' .
p~e of this booklet relat.es the baptisms and that
"twenty were confirmedori May 24th", 1901. Penped
neatly at the bottom 01 the pagil '18 the remark, "On '
this . day, I, Fl9rence Crosson Ryerson was baptized.'"
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MlBs Satella" Waterstone, , whose booklet ' covers
the years betweJ!D 1800 and 1901, was bo_tJl In GreeJ1.- "\
wood Lake In 1875. She was the ~augbter of Edward
T. WaterStone . and. "Satella Sharps Waterstone~ Her
maternal grandfather was Christian Sharps, th~ Invent- .
or of the Shlu-ps rifle, a fifty caliber gun used ·in the
early west for buffalo lmntlng. Her aunt waS Miss Jennie
.
VVaterstone.
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_ Satella Waterstone received , her early education
, - . ~om private ' tutors and later attended Columbia University before studying mUSic In Jena, ,Germany and
tre~el1Jng extensively throughout Europe and the .
United states~ Upon her return to the famUy, she became associated' with the Spinning Private School In
South oraiige.N. J.
In 1915-,Miss Waterstoneest~lished .t he HeddenWaterstone Private School for Boys and Girls, in
.orange, New' Jersey. She and ~ss Emma Hel:Iden
taught children from "" Kindei"garten age through the
Third Grade, · and Miss Waterstone continued In the;
piOUS, genteel traditions of her famUy. She was a
joyous person, and expressed her love of life and the
beauty surrounding her In ,the many verses which she
wrote for her students. She set many--of her "Chil. dren's Verses'" to mUSiC, aJld her song ' books' for
children were published by G. Scl}iriner. Inc. of New
York.
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When , Miss Waterstone returned each Christmas
time to celebrate C~ist's Birth with her f.amUy, she
attended services at the Church of the, Good Shepherd.
In due time, she was to · lead, another ceremony which
. would become traditional In Greenwood Lake.
In 191'7, a handsome young miniSter, only a few
rears In his calling, decided he could do greater good
helping the w6UDdedand sick on Europe's battlefields. ' He tendered his resignation to the growing
congregation of the Church of the Good Shepherd~
" and went overseas as a Chaplain. ' Somewhere on the
fields ' of France, in 1918, Rev. Hadley H. Cooper
ran to help a soldier who lay critically wounded. As
he bent over the soldier, a bullet tore through Radley
Cooper's body, burling him to the ground. He was
buried in France's Flailders Field.
The congregatfon he left felt that nothing .less /
than a living memorial woUld be fitting. An evergreen
was planted on a corner of the Church property
where Windermere .Avenue and Waterstone Road intersect. It woUld be ever atter known as the Cooper
Memorial · Tree. At Christmas time, the people of
the congregation, led by a vested choir under the dir ection of Miss Satella Waterstone, sang the traditional hymns, ~d _the Story of the naUvlty ' was read. ,
, ThiS cuStom was perpetuated for many years ·
Interior of the Church on Chapel Island at the tum of the century.
22
rtThe
Story of
Greenwood, Lake"
1941 ChapellslaridChoir. Back, I. to r., Rev_ George W. Wickersham, Rector; David Ball, Andrew Shuttleworth,.f/arjorieRyerson, Virginia Hildebrandt, BettY ShuttlewQrth, Helen Getter, Anna Ringwig, Elsie Garrison', Patty Crow,
Edward Hildebrandt, Skip Kirt and Florence Ryerson, Organist. Front, I. to r., Clarence Willner, Clifford Sayer, Doris
Sayer, Edna Hart, Barbara Meyer, Joan Knecht, Mildred Willner, Jean Hunter, GJoria Schleich, l\4agdalen Andrews,
Jocalyn Andrews, Jean Crow, Norman Durin. .
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Mrs. Evelyn Polleroholding son, Ronnie; after his
christening at Chapel Island. , .
mill, in 1962, the Cooper Tree became the adopted
Christmas Tree of the . Village ot Greenwood Lake.
The tree was trimmed with Ughts . by the V111age
crew (today more than eleven ' hundred bulbs are
used) and the entire village was invited to join in
Christmas "welcoming"; Today, all three churehes
_ in the v111age take part in the prayers and liturgy of
the Birth of Christ, and the three choirs lead children and adults in singing the familiar carols. Once '
the Cooper Memorial Tree is lighted, signifying-the
end of services, the Christmas season has officially
arrived in Greenwood Lake. '
Satella Waterstone would have delighted in the
joy and community togetherness shown at these Christmas'celebrations. Christmas to her was a wonderful
time" a time not only of toys and presents, but of
gladness and reflections on the birth of Christ. One
of her poems, from a eollection published by her good
biend, Miss Grace Parker, atter Miss Waterstone's
death in 1938, shows most clearly .t he ideals which
she communicated to all her pupils.
"CHRISTMAS"
'Tis the time of gladness,
'Tis the time of mirth, '
'Tis the time of happiness'
Over all the earth.
Let us all be merry,
Let us all be gay, ,
Let us all sweet carols sing
On Jesus Christ's Birthday.
Fi!e at Chapellslan~, 1948; . The congregation of the Cnurcn of the Good Shepherd had moved to the Church on
Windermere Avenue and Church Str~et in 1946.
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~;:.~ {1 yile ~~~e 1J~e~ ~~d c1iu~ll; rii!~~ ~~~d ,f.or:'!la~,y , Yf~,~'~s a tem i~~r:Of days ~st:& ~~~a~S¢. of th~ danger
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JEN.NIEWATERSTONE,who founded t~e Gr no ,
wood Lake Public library wit" a gift of 7,00 volumes i}l1932.
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It presented, It was.torn down' In -1967 when CountY teglslator VictorJ. lfrdmererpurcbased the, Island
from Mr. and Mrs. Edward Schradin.
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nty'Legislator Victor J. Ludmerer at SI,Hldown Interfaith Service, Labor Day Eve of 1967 .
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tlThe Story of
Gr~en~ood
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Lake,"
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~ILA' ~ arO/nl~~~~~
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TheSe lines, copied from the Waterstone deed of 186), indicate the typical boundary lil'!e descriptions given in those days. The Waterstones
had their,land surveyed and stake out with iron markers; and subsequent deeds are more precise.'
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EDWARD T. WATERSTONE, son of Edward and MarthaWaterstone, came to
Greenwood Lake in 1-861. The Waterstone Bridge was named in his memoiy.
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In 1919, Waterstone cOttage was opened by Miss
Gi'ace Par1!:er as lnkowa House, aself:-governing,
se1f:'supporting vacation, camp for ,Single, professional
. women. , A recr.eiiUonbulldlng was bullt on the shore, ___
and deed. records show that 31 of the 36 acres belOllg- .
1Jlg to 'Miss .Tennie Waterstone were transferred to' '
Grace Parker. In the 1930's, Inkowa House became
a resort-lor farri1l1es and. young. men aii"d.women,-Ud
Was mown as he Ram~ Lodge.
.
By the. beginning Of 1930, Greenwood Lake was
~and1ng rapidly.
~he~e was a morie iiou~e on
.Tersey AVenue, bunt by Thomas and Clinton Wisner
....
of Warwick, and the' Br:andon Property had been
rued as "Brandon Shores" for sale as residential
-.- land 'sites.
A new stone school had been bullt on
, water~one Road, west of Windermere Avenue, leaving an empty wooden building on property which ran
_from Jersey Avenu.e through to Waterstone Road. A
gTOUp known as ' the "Greenwood Lake Taxpayer's
, Assoc1at1on," which worked for the betterment of
Greenwood Lake, expressed the h~ that the . empty
bulldlng could be used constructively for t.be people
of Greenwood Lake.
In 1932, Miss Jennie waterstone dO)lated a g11'I:
ot ~ 700 volum~s, to be lISad as the basie-col, le~tlon for a publlc library. , Wit fIiJs en<fowment,
" the reenwoo LaKe Taxpayer's Association agreed
, . to become responsIble for thj! support of a free
• publlc'library for an experimental time of on~ year.
School District trustees consented to allow half , of
the ol.d schoolbulldlng, fronting on V1aterstone Road,
to be used to house .t he new institution, and paid for
repa1r1ng the root and the 1ilterior of the building.
With the Gteenwood Lake Taxpayer's Association
_leading the, way. men _and boys of thev1ll~e donated
hours ' of labor to make bOok shelves, paint the interior and Install a heat~g plant. They . also repaired and varnished furniture to be used as reading
tables and chairs. '
•
The Greenwood Lake Rubl1c Libr~ 'Was q>ened .~
witli pomp and ceremO:l 1h:December 1932. Named
as Library TrustEres were John C. MInfurn, Charres
Hunter, Theodore Greck, -Fran!t Hutchinson and Mrs.
. Grace Parker Newton. Margaret Hallock (Mrs. Chas.
Hallock) was appoiiited Ubrarian in 1932, and is now
cMef llbrartan.
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For over a year, the Library Executive Com-.
mittee, under _the direction of Mrs. Susan Fay, held
card parties, penny' socials, and benefit dances in a
tremendous effort to raise enough money for continued support of the library. ~e Taxpayer's Asso-
InKowa HQuse and.. Recreation Building, a resort for single, professional people. When si·ogl.@, r."rs. 'Emma Kay
Ball came here to vacatio-n and met Mr. Harold Ball. '
.
cft1.on then offered the library, tree and clear, to the
to others, that year was a sad one ·ror her. In 1932,
School J:>1strict to be afterwards malntained by school
her brother died. Edward T. Waterstone, whose ill '
district taxes.
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health .had first occas1oned . the family's move to
A ProvJslonal Charter from the State _of ' New York
. Greenwood Lake, was ' 89 at the time of his death.
was awarded in 1934, and ~ June of 1956; the LiThroughout the years, he had been a strong support
brary received an Absolute .'e harter, certifying that
.In the family's work for the good of Greenwood Lake.
, it met 'all st;mdards set by the State Educational
In 1889, on land donated by him and Alexander Bran:..
Department. When the Greenwood Lake 'Publlc Lidon, the Town of Warwlck bullt 'the road along the '
brary joined the' Ra.mapQ Catsldll Lllirary System,
east side- of Greenwood Lake, thus lacmtat1ng travel
it insured greater services for the people of the
fro'rn one end ot the lake to the other.
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school district. Through this SyStem, books, records
Miss Jennie Waterstone died in 1!i34.In the
and 111ms may be ordered in Greenwood Lake and be
same year, a' permanent bridge was built over the
available in a· few •days. TMs past year, the LiEast ,-Arm of Greenwood Lake and dedicated ·to the
brary Board sponsored AdulLEducation classes with
me-mory of Edward T. Waterstone. The "road to
cOUrses given f,n Greenwood Lake by Orange County
Waterstone Cottage" was called Waterstone- Road.
Community College; Quilting lessons and· ballroom '
Both are fitting memories to the family wMch loved
dancing · were taught In the "once empty'" old school
and labored_for Greenwood Lake.
bulldlng. . For the children in the az.:ea, the Library ...
The waterstone tract of land was purchas~ In
Board'sponsored a Magic Show, instructions on how
1,959 by L. Gustam Moses, former New . York stale
to make puppets . and a PUppet Show, and a Trained
Senator.
It then became known as Timber Hlll •
Chimp Show. The old school building, the RecreaTwo years later,: contlnulng the , tradition of service
tion Hall, and'LIbrary, was indeed being used "cc:mbegnn by the original owners· of the propertyt . Mr.
'structively" for the people..of Greenw90d Lake.
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and Mrs. Moses donated a portion of land and a
But tpese programs were not e\ten- dr~am~ of
" building to the Greenwood Lake Volunteer Ambuwhen Jennie Waterstone made that first great conlance Corps.
The land of the Waterstone family
tribution which found.ed the library in 1932. With all
had ,come fUll cycle.
the happiness Miss waterstone received from giving 'f ,
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Greenwood "La!<.e~A Villag-e'
The years betWeen 1830 and 1860 brought fantastic changes to the United States.. It ~as an age
of building, Qf eStabl1shing rallroad' and'industrial
empires, of spe<;ulatlng in lane! and ney/ businesses!
, Each new enterprise held the \ promise of : great
wealth. Even the ~.mallest business owner was con-
sldered "weil-to..do". In this nation withOut aristocracy or "nob1l1ty",the elite ,were measur~ til different ways. Land ownership, or a country home,
or the "right" club was how to sflow that one was
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doing well financially.
In Greenwood Lake. the mines and furna~es were
The Windemere Hotel was built by John Hazen who was born:in Green~oif
.
He married Sarah Merritt. Hazel'! was a tax collector for one term and a town constable fer
tw.o years. His partner in the hotel in-the 1880's was John .Van Ness of Bellvale,_who mar'tied Mary Hazen. TIley had one daughter, Maud. ("908 History of Orange CQunty)
Dot doing well. sterling would' be offered for sale_
in 1856, ' and the Ringwood Estates were tip ~or tax
sale by the sher1ff1s office. It · was a combmatlon
of factors which had brought these furnaces to this
POint. Rapid expanSion, other intereSts pn the 'owner's
part, and the inab1l1ty at , Ringwood to get the ral1-
This scene of the porch at Windemere Hotel was known as the-"Aocking Chair Brigade."
John Hazen became a guide for sportsmen who visited the Waterstone Hotel and Brandon
House. His daughter, D'aisy, married William Wright who was proprietor of the Winds-. .
mere Hotel for many years. Bill Wright and Jackey Martin had a race track in Windemere
Park-. (1908 History of Orange County)
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"The Sf ory
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f Greenwood
Solo,!!on Caldwell's advertisemen~ which accompa"nied the map of the 18-7O's. Many of the plot descriptionS are
,"quamt" when compared to today's ads~ Caldwell. expecte~ villas to be built and therefore offered the plot in'
large acreages.
.)fj
a 'r,~ :
,road to continue the Une up Into the area.
One man whO saw ' the potent1al1ty In Greenwood
Lake was Solomon Caldwell. .It Is possible that '
be was first attract¢ by the advertisements oft~r1ng
sterling for ' sale In 1856• . In that ,year, Caldwell
began to "purchase large . tracts of land. He bought
fr ...:)', or ncar I,his Ifrllpaly,;. ;'l ,d tbe b"o
j, ..: rllr)forc rt·s~ ·r:/,:". ar;: ,r .o',': :ncluded in
~ i .• - \~; ' :. :~ : . . ~; ~(. . ... . ~ j" r :'n .' : / :: n of :ll ·\Jut . 'leo :' :-rt~;), flankt:rl on {':,.--h Ifj.! " h:: ;: i: ;tTr;~ flf ,Pt1'\ L:, kt!~ ar":l ~~ ~.~!e t:. :~
. .' ! d .. '1 ;· i f..
;t '
Wilh a wide
:llI d '.Ihrc,u , b ... . ('·:· nl"l·.
L·.. - J,'
~. , . 1 ' ;::I. ~. r'; ~ :: ~;': i': (·..~ t . ::; ~l '.'.::.: :. To a C:~l~h :tljs~ . (,( slInic.: ;'·;lt n~ ~:tJl', ( ' ! ; ' r~ q " l ":: .. :;1( r :. p:" 'i' .. , -. ~ 1 r: :!. ~ ,. '. .\~H)!c pr::;-.
j ! " " ::. :':. 1.,,: !.::. ,. ' ! ~ ! !1 " r\ .!~~, ~ : . • ! h .!!: . i !-.Ol.l lt J·,'li·tJr:e':'t'~:a bL' 'H;hl~. '
LitH·r .; ;:"..: ' .t: .:I.•.. !"!;:::::,..: ~ ':· r :: · ~. " ::" •. : . ~ ~ : ~ t:r'v~r :: ::
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'.'.: ;; ~:.'.: d l. · il ~ ! d ~.' ::
' i t:~ : ' :~ t \! l -: t·: d. .p!ot .. , .. '''i f.-)Jk :,': :::
: 1. .. ; .. : : ,: : . ...
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'l·~:!: : n::-'l!!'a.
~tt ct! nll\nil)~ ~(iTth'
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from Theron Felter, Gilbert Hunt, Joseph, Brooks,.
FrankUn ,Varney, J~ H. Weed, Solomon. Smi~ Isaac .
Fowler, and others. Byselllng oftparcels along the
shores, he soon had a "showplace" of homes to dls- play .to ,other buyers.
Parcels which were sold
went to' Charles Hazen, who bunt Hazen House.(Greck.'s
, Maplewood), and Alexander Brandon who boUght Cbapel
Island and bunt Brandon House. _ other buyers were
John Hazen, who SOOIl opened WlDdemere Hotel, George
Clark, S. Garrison, GrlnDel BUrt and John Bradner.
A final piece went to El1z.aRyerson on the West arm.
Wben Solomon Caldwell felt that circumstances
were right, he began to advei't1se hIs- land for sale,
, not as a single parcel or' a few acres, bitas a "vUlage". He had 275 acres to oller to Ita capitalJst
¢ ~ci~nt means, enterprise and capacity to handle
thewh-o~ property and layout the VUIage; _a handsome fortune can be made."
Caldwell was not wrong..wlleD he advertised that
the "DIlcleus of a vUIage" already existed. In 1876,
the ra1lroad came , to Greenwood Lake. Too late
to help the faltertDg R1ngwood Furnace Estate, the
Eri~ line was just In time for the llotel and resort
business which had already begun in Greenwood Lake.
, Their- depot was at Sterling Forest, New Jersey••••
the present location of T.G.'s East. HQWever, the
hotels were at , the other jIIld althe laie•••• Hazen
House, Brandon House, Waterstone Cottage, Wlndemere
Hotel, Hotel, Boulevard (on --a lot behind Hanley's
S~onery), Traphagen House •••• aUthese betels needed
a means of transportation to get their guests from
the depot to tIle- North enIL Steamboats provided
that meansl
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S.te'anib 0 a t8
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MAp OF SO~OM(lN CALDWELL'S PROPERlY IN THE 1870'S '
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The Greenwood Lake TraDsportai:Ion Company launehed the ffrst
eamboat on Greenwood Like in.. the
Same Y,eBr as the .railroad extended the line.. Tbe
"Moutcla1r" was a magn111cent dou61e decker side '
'Wheeler capable fjf ~ 400 ~ers. As
soon as the st1ITfngS of spring were upon the land,
the hotels and boarding houses cam~ alive with ~c­
tlv1ty.
When the last of winter's ic;e would float
in harmless ,Uttle, cbuDks, the Lake would once again
be nav1gabl~ and the great - Montclair would ply the
lake, br1ng1ng weekend -and summer guests and vacatioDers for a season ,of tun, sports and relaxation.
Some of these. early. p8$Sengers were just as iIiterested in looking for propertY to l,luy as in being
entertained.
Special,'" Auction Sale Trams" from
New York City and Jersey City were for the express
purpOse of intereSt1.ng would-be land ,owners. _ A
round .trip-ticket on these "specials" was one dollar.
,As the years passed, and Greenwood Lake waS
advertised more and, more as "the place" to spend
a vacation, the '''Milford'', "Arlington" ,and .. Anita"
were added to the SfeamliOat '11n. - Eaell earried
100 passengers. Dar1Dg tile season from APril 'untu
early November, tIlese boats were kePt busy, Med
- to capac1ty.
People left from New,York City or
Hoboken, rode tile Erie for , two hours to SterUng
Forest, then transferred to the steamboat. ,It ~as'
an hour or so boat ride while passengers were let
otlat the various stops for all the newer hotels
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. which were added to'the schedule.
From Sterllng Forest, the boats ma,cle .for the"
Lakeside Hote~ In New Jersey •••• then on up to ,the
W~ands ana FerncUff Hotels. From there it was
just a Uttle way _to the Continental. Down one side
and back the other•••• the - " Bureau". the Mountain
-Spring HouSe (Ryerson's was "jUst near there), then
the m~ stop ,at W1ndemeN I4Dding. From there,
the boat would cross to Brandon House and the Waierstone Cottage, 'and ,cont1nue down the East Sh9re.
A stop at Intowa bodge, which was then haifway
down the lake' to ~rUng Forest, and 'back to the
train depot. The fare was 25~.
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At least four :men~ stU1 well-known or ,remembered .
In Green.wOOd Lake;, worked pn these boats In their
yoUth. Somehow, through the pass1ng01 years, the
memories of the hard worklnvolved has faded; only
the goCld times can be. recalled easUy.
Vincent : Detro and· .Harold- Ball were deCk hands
on t~ Milford, but at different times. ' Both had a
couple _al very close callf'. "Spike" Detro remembers when the MUford had just left Sterling, Forest
with a full complement aboard~ They crossed the
lake and stopped at Lakeside to drop off a few passengers and were proceeding northward. "Spike" was
up in the wheel house and Captain Hunter was on
deck, taking tickets and mingling with the passengers.
As tbe bQat passed the W~ands area, there was
a sudden sickening scraping on the bottom. They
had scraped across a ' reef. ' With luck, "Spik~"
steered it out of harm's way, and the boat continued
on its way.
~on another trip, when Harold Ba1J. ,was on duty
in the wheel -house, that ~ame reef was right in the
"flay of tJi,e ship's course. ' This time, luck ran out
and the reef took its toU; The boat was stuckI It
was finally taken of! the reef with DO - harm to the ,
boat ' or the passengers, but ' ever after, that spot
was caretUi:ly- avoide4- It ,was a "hazardou.s" condition, expec1ally In the late fall when the feg roned
In thick and heavy an'd stayed for hours. NaVigation
was then completed by com~s, and ~- REEF was
always therel
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Bill utter and Jess Donald alsO worked on the
-:-steamboats, but thelrs~ was the Arlington. BUI
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"The Story of G-reenwood. Lak.e"
. Steamboat AN ~T A - one of the smaller boats,
held 100 passengers.
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1889 - Steamboats at dock at Willow Landing. This was the siteofWiUow Point Hot~l, built by William~eGraw
in 1871. ' He was the first sheriff in the area. Willow Point is now .owned by Seeley Quackenbush;:Sr. and IS a
picnic, swimming area and marina.
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William DeGraw built
raw's Dance Pavillion iit the 188P's, For many years, it was a popular place of entertainment. 'Under Joe ·Murchitl, it became-the Spanish Gardens and later the long Pond Inn, where many champion boxers trained. The building was a discotheque in the 1970's and wasgestroyedby fire. _ - .
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was captain and Jess was Fireman, thereby earning
Fred "Haggle" Hazen
his nickname "Cinders".
was also a captain on one of the boats. His sister, .
Annie Hazen was the founder andpuQlisher of Greenwood Lake'; f1rst newspaper, and the Hazen's -home
waS "The Bureau" on the ' West Shore (near the
Circus Lounge).
It was here at "'a little general .
store that ."The. Buzzer" was composed. ,It was,
naturally, one of the stops for the steamboats, with .
a newsboy out on the dock selling the latest edition
of the paper.
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. One of the· more unusual stories about the pJlSsen,;.
ger boats ' on the lake concerned a ' ~rivately-owned
one called the {<Carrie T". . Coe Ten Eyck, who
owned the .Valley HOuse, and later . the Ten- Eyck
Hotel, needed this small boat to navigate in the
East Arm where his hotel was located. The 6ar- .
rie T (named , for his daughter" Catherine) could
come up past the swing bridge across . Waterstone
Road anEi up the shallow channel, where the larger
boats could not. COe Ten Eyck made arrangements
with hiS Captain to stop the boat · at ,Chapel Island ,
and blow the whistle . . One'toot for each of the passen-·
gers' bound · .for the ''1;'en ' Eyck Hotem By the time
the little boat docked, Mr. Ten Eyck (with all that
advance. notice) had accomodations for each guest.:
all ready.
The coming of the automobile in 1928, with improved roads l~ading to Green~ood Lake, was the
beg1nn1ng of the end of the steamboats••••tbe passing
of a beautiful, luxurto~ _er~.
Before the 30's,-!he
Erie Railroad was considering closing down the depot
at Sterling Forest; the steamboat was no longer
. needed.
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Within the next few years, these. monarchs of ,
'. the lake came to a rather inglOrious end. Tbe Anita ,
caught tire oft Sudman's Hotel (Sullivan'S Looge)
and sank to tbe bottom. The ,Millord was used as
a houseboat and was, unW a sho,rt time agO, located
. at the ' Morin residence in Sterling Forest. The
Arlington san}c at Breezy point, was partially raised, .
and became ' part of a swim ming dock; the little·
Carrie T caught f1re near Lakelands Marina and
sank. The great Montclair was hauled ashore and
taken to Elm Street. It was converted into a residence and was the first home of Mr. and Mrs. Walton
Trumper when they came to Greenwood Lake. It
is still there, in the backyard of the Donahl!e~s home, the only visible remains of a fabulous time on Greenwood Lake.
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'The MILFORD, one ofthe smaller steamboats.
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The Montclair was th~ ·fim steamboat on Greenwood Lake.' Befor<the steamboats, '1 he
Pioneer," a sailboat, and "The Sylph" were used as lake transportation.-
This photo is1rom ~ 1901 brochure publishedby th.e Greenwood Lake' Taxpaye~ A~oci~tion.
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1880-Wlndemere Lanaing was the main stop for the steamers. .From there, pass.mgers would walk 9r take a ~Icarri~ge'~. to the hotel which were not on the lake's stllres.
Before the railroad and steamboats, in 1876, visitors came by stage from "Monks"
in New Jersey or ftom the stop in Monroe.
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"The
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Story of Greenwood Lake"
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Cuttin~ i~e ai Greenwood Lake, N.Y; The Mountain Ice Company had two commerciai ice houses oD,jhe east
shore wh~chheld 90,000 ,tons of.ice. T~e wooden structures in'tfiiS picture warn "trougfls'l. The ice was slid
up ffiese structures an(finto the Ice_house.
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During the summer months~ ~kes of ice were removed from th~ ice storage houses and delivered to residents by
wagons. At thIS tIme of year, the men forgot the bItter cold they were exposed to in the winer when
the Ice was cut.
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ho~drawn
Mountain Ice Company stables on the left. The building on the right is the White Horse' lnn now the
Greenwood Lake News building.
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'Mountain ICe Co. crew with horse ~n~ wagon. Front. row, Charles 'Finnigan, unknown, Mike Schmidt, Alex
~.cCI.OUd, ~oss Ernest Saunders. SItting on wagon, JIm Ryerson, Jimmy Finnegan, George Bowman Sr., John
tomgan. . op ro,,!,.Black ~oe Ryerson, R~y Garrison, Fred Utter, Jake' Corter, ullknown .. (Photo taken in
1922) ~n '"terestlng note IS t!'at ~en MIke Schmidt's son Was born, he was named "Mico" Schmidt for the
_Mounta," !fe ~ompany Qrgamzatlon.
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y~ 1876 saw another bUsIness begtn. •••
a business UD1que to 'the lake because Its only product was the lake ltself••• .ICElI •••• lake water froZe!
each winter to at least twelve inches Wck! I
Even before the MO\Dlta:1n Ice Company bought III
property Just at the New York-N~w Jersey line OJ
the East Shore,...ihere was antce business of a sort
All the boardinghoUses and hotels on both sIde!
, of the lake had ~1r own I~ ~s which ha'd tc
be fllled to the railers for the summer season;, t
was a ready market. But the Mou;otain Ice Companl
made Ice harveStIng a big business in QreeJJwooc
Lake.
Refrigeration was yet to be. Ic~ made bl
nature was the only meaps of keeping things cool
the ' ice '*as kept in oak'lce chests, or "ice boxes"
in the ' well-to-do homes of the c1t1es in 18S0.
(
c1t1~Uke Newark and- Patterson ..wh1c1l could b4
, se rvlcea lly fhe allroad out Qf~sterl1ng- Forest, N~
e'l
Jersey were eager for the suPPlY from Greenw
Lake. The company's fwo tce JloJ]ses near the de
held 90,000 ODS once, and'1lad to be mIed to CapaCiti
by flie end orFebruary.
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The .lee -at the- narthern end of.. the~ was- read)
for _harvesting first, so the Ice
es at -Brandol
House , Watemone Cottage, Windemere Hotel, Haz~
HOUSe ana Teacliman's Trapbageji House were.. nne<
early Iii the seasQll. AlthOugb most 01 the hotel!
bad their Ice shedS , right on lakeside, some_~~
up a distance -from the !,ake. Sleds were b~
down to the- shore, loaded wWl great slabs of lcel
then pulled by a team of horses up the banks ane
, to the sheds. Once in a while, the heavy loa~' W31
Just too much of a strain OIl the' ice, and with th\
sharp 'snap (ldent11y1ng the crack wbich widened rapldll
in the ice) all wOuld be 'Plunged to the'bottom of th\
icy waters.....team, sled and load.
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The ice which ~ brought to the sheds had tt
be kept well" into the summer season, so it waJ
necessary to pack It in some sort of insulation tc
protect It from the warm winds of spring and thl
,rays of a hot summer sun. The wallS of each ic
house were lined with about six inches of sawdust
Up ''near the roof rafters-, on top of the pUes of U:e
_ were lay~rs and layers of hay and straw for extr:
1nSUl,atlon.
The ice \ was kept frozen for mont .
and months.
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After the ice houses at the' northern end wer
tilled, the har<! work really began. The MO\Dlta!j
Ice Company hired all the available men It coul
ftnd to harvest the 90,000 tons to nn the commercta
ice houses. ' To supplement , the work force,
company would advertise in -the c1t1es, ,and as a-las
resort, ·tt would hire the down-and-outers from
Bowery in New York City. They were brought ~_~
train, promised a winter of work and pay, and meall
and lodging were provided by the company at a bOard~l
house in sterling Forest.
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These, men from the' Bowery in New, York ~lt;
"were called the "bag feet crew" because few nat
shoes to wear and instead, wraWed gunny sackj
. aroUnd their f~ and ankles. However, some tool
t,
a look at the huge ice hOuses to ' be fUled, and thl
-lake with its endless sea of tce to be harvested
, and decided to return to New York. ' Money, me$lS
and even a warm place ' to sleep were poor com
PensaUon 'for days and days on e'nd of nothing bll
ICE.
A typical day of ice harvesting sta.rted at sf
o'clock in the morning ' when the crews would meE
at the Mountain ' Ice Company stables on Windemel1
- AvenUe (in bick of the "Heldleburg"). By lantel1
ught, they hitched up the. teams to the sleds an
started the long freezing ride down the middle -(l
the _ lake where blt1Dg ' winds blew unhindered an
' threatened frostbite with each' blaSt. When the team
reached the section to be cut that day, banas-feet were' alreadY half-frozen.
Harvesting ice was no,' simple process. Theare
to be cut was first cleaned of snow with i'scraper
' pulled by horse t'earns. Then a machine called
.. marker" would outline the slab to be cut. Til
marker made a series of grooves about three fe,
, apart, lengthWise across the ice; as the horses pUIIE
the heavy machine across the cleaned area. TN
was follow,ed by a special plow, fitted with a stet
bar and , sharP knives. The plow cut into the grOOVE
and sectioned, tlie ice into 50 pound slabs. Th~
were f1~edin an already prepared open chalinel
the troughs and into the lee ,house. Here they we)
maneuvered into position, covered with sawdust 81
, straw" and stored untu it was time to load them 0Di
" railroad cars ,: for ' shipment. Day in and day oq
the process was the same•••• cold, long, bard wor'
'In recalling his days with the Ice crews, Vinc '
Detro said, "By the time ~the horSes ~d sledS ~
to sterling Forest, It was sUll ' dark, 'but ' the darl
ness had the early stages of dayllghtaro\Dld tf
fringes.
That was the_ beg1nn1ng of the day~ Aj
the day would last up to ten o'clock, or even mil
night. There were times when we didn't see da:
llghtat the north end of the lake for a week or mOl1
V, e went to work in the dark, and 'came home in tf
dark. That w~'t just ~ Jive day week then, elthe
It 'Was seven days. During the harvest season, the:
were no days off, no holidays, no weekends. Tli
would come later, when the harvest was over. Ai
in those days, the temP.9raiure , stayed ' in the te
-or low twenties. And for all this, we gOt $1 a day'
\ A few of the old timers also recalled, with a smll
that in 'addition to tlie $1 a day, sufficient portions
Orange county Applejack were supplled. T~ retailI
elsewhere at 40~ a full quart. One 01 the choicest a
best known apple whiskeys was Sayer's Apple B
dlstllled at ' Sayerville between Bellvale and Warwl~
, be days 'of the Ice harv.eslended with the coml
Q1 electriCal r~er Oll. But even Before this t
the ce harvest suffered because of a cbangein wint
conditions. In those early days, the water , froze
least a foot. Today~ were' :l"~ ~~~ which are alwa
unsafe,..A!ven for skating. There could be no liMo
ta1n Ice Company" In 1974, it's just not eold
A few rEmiliidets ot"lhose times are SW1 with
28
ttThe , Story 'of Greenw-ood
Lake"
today. When Mrs. Margaret Pitt and her husband,
Howard Pitt, came to Uve at Greenwoo,d Lake, the
. foundation ofa large "cooperative storage'~ ice ' h~usej'
. was stm OIl ' the property where the Fernclift once
stood. It was hard to get a house built "immediately"
in those times, so they decided to build right over the
old founaatlon to sav.e some tlme. They always intended to build ' anather home, but cireulI1$tances never
allowed. After· Mr. Pitt's death, Mrs. pili and her
young son, Howard Jr., remalned in the "temporary"
bouse and never rebuilt.
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".. ,One of the ice houses ~l intact ' st~ds in the
corner of the parking lot of Greck's Maplewood ,Inn.
It Is a small .stone building; now no' rooger needed .
for storing, Ice, it is used for garden supplies. Another of the larger, sto:-age ice houses was on Elm
streett right In. the ~eIiter of the . growing village.
Today, Instead of ice, it houses plumbing suppUes
for ~e RocJdand ' Plumbing and ' Heating Company. '
standing In front of. the building today, It Is difficult
to . imagine how It looked In those early days ....;a
sine:le store. a house- scattered here and there. _
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The
The ftrst Greenwood rake Post Office was also
the first "store'" in Greenwood Lake. "Pioneer
. Market" ·was just that•••• a .pioneer in the 'dayl'l when
· " roads" were . dirt ruts (or lines on a map) and
"Wlndemere Avenue" neatly divisled farms and orC?ha.rds, 'just a short ' walk frQm the store. The adventurous yotmg man who was builder, owner, and
innovator in Greenwood Lake was not a ' newcomer
to the general store business. John Bradner was .
'born in Bellvale in 1849 and, at 18, became a clerk
in a general store there.
He marrJed Clara R.
Hunt. in 1873, and decided to branch out on his own.
He bought a corner lot on Windemere Avenue and
the "road to Jerl;ley'; in 1874 .and by the folIowing
year was in business in the" Pioneer Market". (F reed's
: building ' in the 50's, nQYi oWned and completely renovated . by Mr. Harry L¥nch). In 1876, Mr. Bradner
became the first Greenwood Lake postmllSteranct his
store tHe flrsl posl ~ Befo;re thls; all mail
Iiad been deIivered to Bellvale and carted over the
mountain. BUt with 'tile railroad, steamboats, and the
inerease in homes, it was time for Greenwood Lake
to have its OW.!l posl offlee.
And little by Ultre. things were beginning to change
.in Greenwood Lake. . More and more people were .
moving to the center ' of the activity, to be nearer the
jobS ' ava1l~ble in the hotels, 0":1 the steamtoats, the
railroad, and ' the Ice Company. . . There ' was enQugb
business for another general store, and; Frank Hall
decided to build ,it.. In 1884, Mi:'. Hall opened Greenwood Lake's second store just across. from ttfs former
employer'S "Pioneer Market."
,
.Frink Hall had good reason to expect that business ' .
would be booming; A m3P had just been filed naming
Greenwood L_ake as the ~'Town 'of Avington." True, .
it was only a real estate developer'S idea,." and no
real move was made to incorporate the "Towll of ·
Avtngton", bilt there w~re other indications of V{hat
was to come. The railroad was doing a survey, with
the possibf,lityof continui:tig the Erie line right along
the lake to Dutch HolloW. And because of the popula':
lion sbi1t, a new school was to be built in Greenwood
Lake. , An arChitect, ~r. H. Havell, was asked to
Clesign the new school to be built on the "roaQ to
Jersey.": It would be two rooms, capable of being
later divided into three rooms. The sch().')l was built
before 1887 (now the Recreation Hall and Library).
Minard Hazen followed Frank ' Hall's example in
1887 by building a third ' store, ' and ICE CREA.;'V!:
PARLOR!
Hazen purchased the whole . comer on
wmaemere Avenue andWaterstone Road • . In just a
few year-s, Fred Raynor bought a piece of . thl!! property and put up Raynor's Market. T.he "Nucleus of
a village-H now -bad three . general .stores .and an ice '
cre~m parlor.
All were built within one block of
.
each other.
There were even more changes to. come. First,
. a mountain would be renamed. . On the top of the
mountain, between the lake: and Bellvale, was the,
home.:;tead of Peter Co':).klln, known as "Po t J?eter
House."· The mountain was call
ount Zindle.
In-~ 1890, . Michael Batz P.<>m# the land called the
home-hotel "M«mt J?eter House." And so the mouo- .
tarn was called Mount Petez:.
T e post offil!echanged )ocation around that time;
Frank Hall had been named po$lm:ister and the nevi '
· office moved across the street from Pioneer Market
, to Hall's, Grocery Store. The streets of the village
had not changed too much. There. were still the same
dirt roads of , a few .years back, ' but they were welltravelled by now. _. .The Erie Railr9ad advertised
Greenwooct Lake in an eight-page brochUre distributed
in New York. City. Besides Usting the many hotels
and describing their lavish accomodatlons, the brocbure carried information designed to attract the.
sportsman. - A list of hunting and fishing guides
contained in the publication includes: Charles Don-'
ald, C. B. Hazen, W. A. Ramsey ' (sic), S. Garrison,'
and G. fJazen •
. Once again, land was being SOld•.••in large parcels. If you had been here in . 1890, :;-would you pay $750
for a piece of land in Greenwood Lake, purely on,the
chance t hat it could· be developed as resort sites and
residential lots? It was a big gamble since none of
it was on lakef~ont, but for '$750, Frank Hall bought
· all the land on- the west s ide of Windemere Avenue
frt?m O~' Bt!'e~ ~G- t)ie Linden House. By making a
payment at a tax sale, Hall r emedied the situation of
,.baving no lakefront. The second piece of land was on
the east side of Windemere Avenue. all the way to the
lake and as far north as his first purchase. A,side •.
'j~".',,",'
ieehou~
at Greek's Maplewood Inn, 1973. Holding the saw is the late William Martin.
/
.884 TOWN of
AVING:TON
/
MONTE LAC
PARK '-.
.,
~So
COMPOSITE-OFJWO MAPS FILED IN GOSHEN, N.Y. THE STREET NAMES IN BRACKETS ARE FROM THE 1884
MAf,'AND All SITES .M~RKED WI,TH A STAR WERE ON THAT MAP.
._.
--
The leaning sign says "Frank Hall's Fancy Groceries. Post Office is in the smaH ell. Bill Hall is on the steps.
..
(Corner of Windermere Ave. and Waterstone Boad)
. ·J'I~ ", ", :" .).~~ ::,1: ~ ': lJ J .: '~:~'~':CI:'1 (; : 1 ,~.-'. -.: ,~ ~~ ,~
:} ,(~ } t'C'l 'i'f\'~'t~to ~~ f'~;. ~Ct- l:t; ~'-:!i~·t;' ~;: :t;:\i~ :t.-f~_ ; , · ~".(~ ". eL~"",;·h ;~.+; .~~"s~:,:; ,"';~.
.
~IThe Story of
,
,
'
·· Greenwood. LaKe"
29
"
from one home and a barn, the land was all orchards
and farms..
'
Much of the land was redeemed by the orig1nal owner, but a map was f1led for the entire piece of property (from the base of the mountam,across Windemere
Avenue to the lakefront). It was, lmo~ as Monte1ac
Park (a composite is on a preceed1ng page).
An attra.ct1ve broChure was pubiishedto advertise
pro~rty and thecorporatfo~ drew up deeds for
new owners with an eye to the future. Very llttle ,
the
leeway was allowed as the deeds covered nearly ',
every contingency. "In the interest of purchasers
, and _to, promot-e , the development Qf the Village ' of
Greenwood Lake asanattract1ve Summer Resort"
read these ' deeds, - " ••••the purChasers agree they
shall Il9t erect any barn, stable, or outhouse ' within
fi1tyfeet of the street•••. and no draJnage shall be
emptied ' Into Greenwood ' Lake ,or its trlbutartes "
The wording is remlnlscent \ Of today's problem~. :
~
-
The deeds alSo restricted the type of business
to be allowed, probably the first attempt at zoning
districts In Greenwood Lake: "-•.•• not to et~ mam- tam or ' permit•••• any slaughter house, tannery, bone
bolling, . or sldDdressing , establishment, •.••" Also
prohibited was the m:mufacture of "soap, glue, starch,
varnish" turpentine, lamp black, gun powder, or fertilizer", and the corpOration deeds also forbid " •••. brass
foundry, forge, mail , or other foundry, ale houses,
brewery, dlstlllery, or oth~ place for the manufac, tureof wine, beer, or Intoxicating liquors••.• " In
_ short, there was to be no "noxIous; dangerous, noisy
or offensive trade or business whatsoever."
'"
This photo of
("'and a h~te~ The
These restrf.ctions 'did not discourage" any customers. With the extensive public relationS' being done on ail fronts by so many business people, Greenwood,
Lake attracted more and more visitors. And, as stU! ' '
happens today. the vaCationers decided to stay and
~ake Greenw~ Lake their home.
Uriah and Sarah Teacbman bought the hotelin' t883andJ.~
ce sur~oun(!etftfie propertY). Mr. an ~rs; FranIC Crosson, parents of
Mrs. Florence Ryerson,
la to help.Mr. Teachman. After 1~03, the,hotel was owned by Mr.
and M"~ Charlie Angemiller. When her husband died, Mrs. Ang~miller m'arried. Ferdinand T~ostel and continued '
operations. In 1916, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Greck came t9 the Lmden House With sons Charlte and Teddy and
daughtersJo, Ray and Bert. When Mr. Greck moved to the Maplewood in 1924, the hotel went through a suc·
cession of owners: Mr. Herbert Mutz Ressell and Fritz Vesta, Frank Krasse, Harry Stanley of Warwick. In 194&
Frank and Mary Benz purchased the (;nden House and ra,n it with Bavarian entertainment until Mary's death.
The hotel befame Mot~e(s D,~sc!»theque und,~r Fred B!n!tler, Pat Kelter ~nd·Bob Gleason. 'A fire, on January;3, ,
~974, de~royed the.ongmal - Lmden House f~rrJl buddmg and the bUSiness closed. But, Frank Beoz is consider·
109 op,enmg a n~ Lmpen House on the same Site.
'
\nalJlluilt-Un~n
/-
Charles Donald, I., guide.
The Agricola residence, Ii one family .bome overlooking the East Arm, was typical of the "palatialhomes" which lined the shores of Greenwood take at the turn of tfie century. The home became ,
"Buser's Terrace Inn.
eft to right, Frank Crosson, Minard Hazen, holding son Clifford;
,uackenbush. Hazen built the first ice cream' parlor in Greenwood Lake-.
The Hall residence (now Humphrey's HoteO was one of the eariiest homes on Greenwood Lake. The '
little boat is probably about the size of the "Catrie Til. , '
," " . ,
, "
30
THE GREENWOOD LA.KE
Henry -Sudman
/
Raymond H.uber:
Robert Raif
Raymond Garrison
Hugh Morris
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.~
Robert Detro·
Ernest Mabee
Patrick Landru
Chartes Lucas
•
,
,---
Buck Sayer
George Peimiex
Charles Spalthoff .
. George ~aw~ins .
I
~
Walter Hutchinson
,
Andrew Burger
i
,
Gerald McQuade
Mark Herman
Richard Habedank
-
I
/
Witliam Margillo
Robert Bonomo
Robert Weiler ·
Richard Litter
. Frank Quinn
... Dr. Herman A Robbir.s .
Dept. Physician
Rev. Harry Reis
. Chaplain
Not available for photographs:
James Healy, Peter Rader, Robert Schnitker, James Whit
James Jolly, Arvin "Knight, Daniel Murphy, Michael Ryar
"The Story- of Greenw 'o od Lake"
31
·.·VOLUNTEER, FIRE DEPARr_ME1~JT· ..
John Morgan
."
\
John Miller
Edward-English .
Edm~nd
Waiter,Mabee;
Ryerson
'Raymond Smith
-'James McKeon .
Glen Detro
Bernard Winstanley
I
\
Richard Viggianf
,r
•
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Edward O'Rourke
.
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~
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j
. Harry Fay ,
Malcolm Moyer . .
Ralph Rub
Charles Niemann
James English -...
Vincent Wood
Elmer.Hunter '
. RoSsMiller ·
Charles Hunter
Robert Juby
. Craig Sudman
.1
William McColloch
Walter Watroba
Rev. Donald Billeck
Ch~plain .
o
.
Msgr. Wilfred .Riordan
Chaplain
'.
, Edward Baldesweiler, Harry foy III, Raymon~ Garrett,
Thomas Smith . .
Harry Saksenb~rg
/
-'
. HThe Story of Greenwood Lake"
32
Old -Families
One of our more un1que residents was. FraDk1in
"Daddy" Welles, artist. photographer, and historian.
Became to Greenwood Lake in 1882~ settling on
Waterstone Rpad - near Linden Avenue. Because of h1s
deep interest .inthe legendary history of Greenwood .
Lake, many of itS stories and. records were preserved.
But Mr; Welles was ~ J~ a "story" collector.
HJsfacts were accurate and he often checked Church
records in other aieas and cOPJed~mbstooe inscrip-:tions, thereby tracing - many famUy trees. He
~ed this Jnf~rlDation to the ·pubUcations of the
. Warwick Historical Society in the early 1900's, and
he ver111ed h1s artIcles.
Because .of .h1s exact documentation, w~.·
able
to know of some otthe earliest famWes in Greenwood
Lake. The oldest date given by Mr. Welles is-1774.
the birth date of one member of the Donald-famtly.
Stephen, Ro~rt, WIDiam and h1s wife Margaret are
just a few of the Donald famtly woo were here in.t£le..
1850's. Daniel and Amelia Sayer. and their daughter
Elizabeth, we_re in Greenwood Lake in 1847.. as were.
John C. and Elizabeth Conklin.
.
other 'families ment1o!led by· Daddy Welles were
tile Hazens.; C~les -and Harriet, and their son Charley in 1,864", John L., and William who was boni in_
1842; and the Ryersons: George and Oressa and their
daughter, Julia in 1878, Abram and Eliza Hotchins
R)lerson. and Jacob and Letta Van Tassel Ryerson ·
in 1880. TheZindle famtly, Abraham and Harriet
aDd Charles date back to 1868; Alvy and Derinda Hall
and their chtldren were in Greenwood Lake in 1859.
Before the turn of the century there .ware Albert '
and Phebe Hunt.er• .John S. and Sarah C. Hunter. Fred
Clark, Elizabeth Garrison, and Nathan D. Rumsey.
Willlam and Catharine DeGraw and Carrie K. Ball,
George K. Ball, and .Phebe A. Ball were also amo:lg
the early families.
-In the Histoctcal Papers, of W.arwlck, F. J. W.<llies
told of the finding of Indian relics: "Maud and Ernest Storms, children ot Gardner . storms. tound Iroquois Indian pottery on their father's land at Greenwood Lake~ 'Fhe cbildren's great-grandfather. Thomas
storms, was a fisbing guide and companion of Frank
Forrester. Another Indian pottery find was made at
Furnace Creek bY Fred Clark. I who was part Indian
li1mself.'~ Gardner Putnam is the great-great grand·
soa of the Thomas Storms . mentioned in this story~
In 1900, Greenwood Lake added another name to
its growing list ot familles.
John Clinton MInturn
was bora in Beijvale in 1853 and opened a general
store there in 1876. He married Mary Ellen Hunter
ot Greenwood Lake the following year. Witb son;
John C. and daughter. Mami~, _~he famlly came to
Greenwood Lak~ and Mr. Minturn bought the "original Pioneer Market" . on the corner of WlIidemere
con-
are
<
Avenue. . The tamtly lived bel$d the si~re and,young .
· John helped his father in the store•. Mr. Minturn was
to be an · important organIZing .factor in Greenwood
Lake. , . ReCognizing tbe need tor protection "for the
palatw ~me3 and spaciOUS -hotels which now stand
· over tormer Indfan Camping grounds," the Pioneer
-: ~lre Company was formed within the next tew years.
_!< l~c·OtDQt1ve _wheel · hanging on the main -street was . _slammed · ~h a -huge sledge }lammer, in case of
tlre, notifying all available hands 10 Join the . bucket
· brigade to help in ' ext1ngu1sbing it. .There was no
other way to sound the alarm, and the only equipment .were bueket,s of wate.r ~d the strong ?ms
whJchcarried them. . Tbe bucket brigad{!- would be
our only fire fighters unttl the Greenwood Lake Vol".
-u nteer Fire Department' was incorporated in 1923.
. Annie Hazen founded Greenwood Lake's first newspaper liThe Buzzer" in 1908 with RatieMarr.
Franklin "Daddy" Weiles and his wife Annie Estelle Appy
Welles on their 50th wedding anniversary. Welles was an
a~i~ and a photographer and many of the photos in this'
edition are copies of those taken by him. Among the
many items of interest in his home was the piano used by
Jenny Lind in concert. .
Seen above are (
) Copping, Arthur Ouackenbush, Howard CrosSon Bill Conklin Howard Ouackenbush .
Roy Quackenbush, Clarence C'!,nklin, r.eclining is William Batz whose-family rena.med the mountaintop trom Zifidle
to Mount Peter.. .
.
..
.
Minnetta Ball, Harold "SaWs mother was an American Indian. ~er family dates back to the ~igning of the Cheese- ..
cock Patent.
.
.
A house party ba~k in 1~93. _ Man with beard, in back row if Frank "Daddy" Wel/es. On his right is Frank Cros- .
son. Steated to hIS left IS Mrs. Welles.
.
. .
I
.,
rrThe Story of . Green ;w ood
33
Lake"
Building the first Warwick-Greenwood Lake State road in 1913.
Henry Babcock, Sr. with team.
.
.
Milkm~n Tom Penal una in the early-1900's. He delivered .one can of warm milk in the morning and a.
can {If cold milk at-night. He would pick up g,arbage in the evening to feed his pigs. The boys are Roy
, Martella atld Richard Penaluna, with Rc:iy's mother; Mrs. Martella. Tom Penaluna's granddaughter is .
Mrs. Myrtle. Detro.
.
Mr. Smith Cyjhers driving his sulky on a Greenwood Lake street in 1910. The HorSe
Black Beauty, drowned in the lake a .few years later.
·
,
Samuel Garrison was one of our
earliest residents. He married
Jennie .Crosson leachman. '
.Herman Donald Sr. and Herman Cash drilling the first well in
Greenwood Lake, 1908'-1909, near Mt. Peter.
. Jennie CroSson Teachman Garrison
JQhn ~!1inturn J~. (hold!ng wheel barrow) .married Nora Driscoll (in wheel·
barrow). Standing behmd the two are ~:1ary Minturn and No·ra's father. .
Howard Crosson and Greenwood LClke'sfirst bus (1914).
/
••
~ ... ~ - ,
.~ '~. ; , "
,~ - :, .' ~
~,._ :._' ~ _ '... ' ...
' . ' _'. "
. :
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'- , .
'
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. . .. : . )
(-."J' ~l·1
. i~..J . U.: " '~ .t";.;t'J~ : ..
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•
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r"
....' 1 'i.:.:r~':. ; ... , ~ ...,~
~t;;'.. ~ ""i ~ ... ~t; ~· ..l ~,.,:~~~\~,.! q ;\,
:
t)t
<:;~~ ~~1~!1 y.:")~t -CiS ,1(';!.J
J ~I~t&':~ ~:hX'
/'
. .. ttthe Story of -G'reenwooCi Lalie"
Or g ani z at i-o n
John Minturn was experienced in getting things
done. He had helped to.,.bnUd the "little red S(:bool
house" in Bellvale and hali been active in the school
and civic affaJ.rs there. He became a memBer of
the Greenwood ' L:ike Sch:)ol Board, and his interest
in children and 'education was a great benefit to, our
. little school housetn GreenwOOd Lake.
The school day was vastly different 1n those days.
There was no ~ing water in the school, so it became a reward for_good 9.eportment (or a specially .
earned privilege) for a stUdent to be allowed to go
to the well to get a pail' of ~ater. Whea t~ was
brought back, it was placed on a bench near_the
entranceway, and with ,a comnion dipper tor all, ·
woUld be the drinking water for the day, Children
from the sterling Forest and Tuxedo Mou9tain area
attended school here ~ -Greenwood Lake, but transportation at that thne was I;>y. horse and wagon instead of a: "school bus."
Leste~, Pettys ' was one of the first · principals,
and when . he. stepped out in the entrance way, ~hed
up and pulled on the rope, and , the great bell rang,
children would know . that school was in session for
the da.y. Leaving their games in the open field nearby, they, would run . up the stone steps and into the
schOOl for the ope~g exercises. .All the grades,
- one through eight, took part. Usually, prayer came
first followed by the ' Pledge of Allegiance to the .·.
flag.
. Then a rousing song was Sung' such as. the
"Battl~ Hymn ,')f the Republic," with the teacher
accompanying on the organ in the' back of the Single
classroom. ' After. Bible reading, there was another
song. Then classes separated and the lessons were
begtlI!.Miss Davis, one of the first teac~ers, taught
all .eight grades with help from the principalln some
of the classes.
•
\
: , ..
Each day was ,the same - eXcept for Friday. This
was an assembly program type of day. There 'Was no
study reading on Friday afternoons, only' entertainment -seading according to one's abUity. The older
grades would . do "Evangeline" or "Tale of Two
Cities", and the younger children would entertain
with short poems and stories-.
'H3.vIDg all eight grad'e s in one room. was really
not too bad unless the classes were too crOWded.
One senior ; citizen who remembers , the -arrangement recalls that she wiS always a lithe ahead 9f the '
scheduled studies- as she · could, overhear the next
class and was always eager togetto .the "next grade's"
work.
. When the school did become too small for the
number
,Children, Mr. 'Minturn would come up
with the solution••••bulld another. But before that
point was reached, there were- many additions to the
existing buildings throughout 'the vUlage.
When 'Minard Hazen was named postmaster" the
pos,t oUice moved to a l.f.t!1e store next to the ice
cream parlor · and Rayoor's Maiket.(Mutin's Real
Estate Office now.)
The flrst ' ·telepho.,e lines 10
19.11 were in his store on the corner•••• there were
tzo cordS on that first switchboard. The board was
later moved 10 !lis home· md then to Eva utter's
home on WaterstoneRoadwhere it stayed until the
!lew. telephone buildfug was bunt 10 1948.
A dial
system was then. installed.
.
.
Greenwood ake's first newspa •
ublished
.in 1908'. "The Buz~~r"
fOlUlded by' R~e.
r
and Arulle azen and ' operat~ for fo
,r.ears: The
h,ome of .t e Buz~er was mown as «The B!lreau", .
an office and store on the west shore.Marr and
Hazen also bullt the first amusement center, a large
two-~tory building on the corner of Oak Street and
Wipdemere Avenue. It ~a3 the gathering place for
the young, people and sometimes the scene .of lively _
"Socials. ,,'
. Another publication, a· .sort of chamb'3r G£. commerce public listing, was the "Greenwood Lake Exch3.!lge ' and General Information" bUlletin printed in
1922. Dorrie Fredricks received items at an office in the Mountain Spring House~ · There were
many new -names and new faces.. in that year. W. B.
Phillips sold real estate and toOkappl1catio~for, '.
T.hispictur~ wa~ takim;ill.1906 of. one of the 1!arly classes-in the .Greenwood-take School. In the ph~t~graph are,
names not (n. order, Pnnclpal ,DaVid Taylor, Primary Teacher Cora Pierson, Elsie Quackenbush, Carrie Hunter,
Birdie Hazen, Nellie Bra~ner, Roy Hazen,' Eva Hazen, Myrtle Hunter, 'Ruth Hunter, Eddie Poston, 'Lo1:tie Hallock,
George Ball"David Ball, leona Balf,Charl~ Hunter, Billie Ryerson, Molly Ryerson,1da PoSten, FrankTeachman,
Effie Ryerson, Howard Crosson, Charles Taylor,Tuth Tay'lo~, Edward Taylor, Mildred Quackenbush, Richard
Quackenbush, Harold Hunter, Fred Ball, Ernest S~ormsi Maude Storms, Elizabeth Storms, Howard Ryerson,
_ . Eugene Hunter, May Donald, Frances D,ona1d, Herman Donald,'JosephRyersori, Robert Ryerson. Very little bas
changed in the building's structure since it was the first school house. The door is now directly up from thestarirs
and railingshavt! been added.
.
I "
.
of
- .-' -~ .
At the school house in 1915 - Front Row;!. to r., Richard Penaluna,.Louis VanHoiiton, Coe TenEyck, Vincent
.Utter, Emma P~naluna, N~IIi,e, Turner, Bridget V.anHouton, Margarite VanHouton, Kilthleen Turner, Margaret
Ryerson. Back row, Emmitt Ball" ~liffordSayer,Raymond Garr.~n, Fred Mabee, teacher Ida Posten, Rachel
Ryerson, Ada Mabee, Annabel Gamson.
.
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I
.Another early student body at the/Greenwood Lake School. Seely Utter; leslie Garrison, ';loe Penaluna, Minetta
Ball, ~dWard Sayer, Magdahm Ryerson, princiRal M. W. Comstock, Mildred Wright, Florenj:e Crosson, Myrtle Pena· .
. luna, Anna Hansen, Edith Weber, Mathilda Wright, Ethel Garrison. .
•
Bertha Gable a teacher in the Greenwood Lake School
in 1900.
'
,
• i
,
-.
The 1910 Memorial Day Parade. (Names noll n order) Jesse Donald, Merlitt H.azen, Mildred Wrlght, Charles Pos~
ten (in black hat), Florence Crosson, Myrtle. Hunter, Stella Utter, Carrie Hunter (large black hat), Gladys Ristert,
Harriet Wrig~.t, Millie Ry~Q!!., ~e.y Utter;-Minnie Ball, Carrie Angermiller, Rutli HWlter, Mary Hallock, Effie
Ryerson, Nellie Bradner, Tessie Turner. School Principal Steele in. derby h!lt; Frank tfall nearest flag; Emmitt Ball
next to ,sister W,innie. On Arbor Day, school s:hildren planted a tree in the school yard. Una of these trees is the '
"Taylor Tree" in honor ofan early principal.
, .
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~"~ -,,~"
-... .
"'~~II-,>""''''~ !'"·c·"",,-- _ ·,~ .~ , ...'\.""..... .~ .~...":" ... '-- .......... ).:~ ~ ......, \ : .~.. i.:~
~-"'~\. ......,~~
UThe
St~ry
of -Greenwood L-ake" ·
, I
-_.telephone connections. He had been appointed postmaster m 1917; and his otnce was then In the sam~
location as «Phillips Agency" Is now, on Windermere Avenue. -Greenwood Lake had a barber shop
ron by A.,G. Gsegnet~ opPOsite the school. Even the
Mountatn Spring House was an add1t1on to ·the fl\lDtltar names of Waterston,e and Brandon.
There were other signs that the vUlage was a
very popular resort. The Wisner ' Brothers, owners of the Oakland. Playhouse In Warwick, opened
-"The Playhouse" In Greenwood - Lake. (With some
alterations aJld a "faceillt", this Is the same movie
bouse as now stands - on -Jersey Avenue.) .In the _
1920's, admission charges were 20~ for adults and 1~ for chUdren;
Just down -from the Playhouse
was another amusement center, Finn'~Shooting Galleryr
Mr. Finn also advertised the STAR Meat
Market. The Elmwood Inn (Murphy'S) was -owned,
first by George -Relyea,then by ~hur Esche; Jack's
Machine Shop had 'been rOpened by -Jake Deer- on the
E3$t i\.rm (the "Sw1ng1n~ Bridge" was called the
Iron Bridge in his ads2:___ Mpuntain Side cottages'
gnests were greeted by~rs. Jacob Ryerson, and
Ute "Valley House" was run by Mr. Charles Greek.
The M_aplewood Inn, b~fore _1924, was man~~ by
M.
Hubbard. Coo · TenEyck had opened the Ten_Eyck lim, and the White Horse Inn on Wlndemere
Avenue was a hotel 'and supper club. This building
'Is now' tbe home of the Greenwood Lake News. A
very interesting map and brochUre Is available In
ttie Greenwood Lake Library which shows -the location of ali these early businesses.
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Marr ~~d, ~azen's Arc~8on OI~,Street and ~indemere Avenue (YeIJow Submarine). The sign ~ver the door
r~ds, B"II~rds . Bowlln.g Alley: (The bowling alteys were upstairs!) The building was sometimes used as a
Village meetmg hall.
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Th.e Gr'eenwood Lake
v o.lu-n tee r Fi;re "Oepartmen
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In March of 1923, a n<>tlcEl, was published: «Anyme interested In tire, _PrQtectlon for this area, please
attend the meating In Good Shepherd" •••• Only 14 men
showed up for this flrst meeting, but by the following
week there ~ere 56 Charter Members.
The GreenwOod' Lake Volunteer Fire Department
vias ~ on March 23 S23...... At this meeting,
Mr. Jacob (J e' Deer was ---elected as the First Chief
of;th~Department:
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. The *st Annual Meeting of the Department was
held on April 1, 1924, thus beginning the tradition of
holding the Annu81 Meeting, with the e1ect1on of of1l-
cers for tl)e coming year, 00 the flrst~esdai in
April. _ '
'I'Ile---GreenwoodLalce' Firehouse . was c.omRlete.!L
on March 23,
and-t:lle-f:lFst Ammal ""Fireman's
ce Vias held on March 26.
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The first Fire Chief,.Jake Deer, with his son Harry. Thme steel wheels were located through·
out the Village: at Dickert's (Diagnostic Center) on Windermere Ave. and Church Street;
at Jake Deer's home, an~ on the Monroe Road. A sledge hammer hung next to each wheel.
This was the original "fire alarm." .
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~ Original
uniforms worn by Volunteer Fitemen.,
Early fire apparatus
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A tradition in the Fire Department - giving the schoolchildren' a "ride on the en~ine:'
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. "The Story of . Greenwood
Lake"
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Charter Members of tbe, .Greenwood Lake V61unt€er Fire 'Department\
Jacob C. Deer'
WiIijam Eo Utter
Arthur Eo Es~he'
William Martin .
Wilbur J. Conklin
Vincent Wood .
-Harold K. Stanley
WilliamRyers~n .
. Frank L. Conklin
W. B. Phillips
. James W.E. Turner
Gus A. Trostel
F.J.
. Frank L. Miller .
Edward Lopez
Fmil .R.lue.g
' Charles DOnald, Sr. .
Harold Ball
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Welles
,
Edward Ry~rson
Clifford Sayer
Merritt Hazen .
Philailder C. Ryerson
BeaUford F. Dunn
W: A. Wright '
Frank M:Hix
George M. Hubbard
V~Wyck Fertis
Thos. F. Brennan
Ralph Horton
Charles Hunter
Jos. F. Garrison
Samuel Jenkins
P~ter Merge~thaler
George Eo Ball .'
Gardiner Storms
Lloyd Seaman
. Edward T. Fotbes
Harry J; Sudmm{
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Jacob C. Deer
. 'William E. Utter
Jacob C. Deei'
William E. Utter
Jess DOnald
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A. W. Speier
George Hun~r
John lltaak
William H. Rehberger
Emmett Ball ' '
. Lynn M. Saxton
Tom Johnson
Edwin JuengIing •
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, Max Bekker
Abraham Marr
Harold Conklin
Jess DOnald
James W. ~r;-Sr.
. NOrman BroWn .
. Seely Utter
Jam~ Conomos
Her~rt Lloyd
. George Weidig '
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Greenwood Lake, Fire Chiefs ·
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1924-1925
. 1925-1926'
1927
1928-1931
1932-1936 (Oct.) .
Philander C. Ryerson (Oct.) i936-1937 . Frederick Christman
. Bernard Miller
Leslie Garriso..
-.1938-1941
Ross Miller
Herbert Wilson
1942
Bernard Miller
Joseph O'l.eary
1943~1944
' H~nry Sudman Leslie Garrison · '
1945-1947
1948-1949
1950-1951
1952
1953-1956 ·
1957-1958
Robert Schnitker
1959-1960
Raymond Huber _ 1961-1965
\ ,"1966-1968
Ted R yerson '
Jolin Morgan
. 1969,1972
Raymond Huber .
1973~ 1974
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. Baseball Immortal-Babe Ruth, third from right, on. o~of h~ many visits to Greek's.
Plaplewood Inn. The "Babe" spent a great deal of time in Greenwood Lake, where '
he came ~o relax between ball games.
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THIS PICTURE ANDniE ONE ABOVE, RIGHT, FROM THE PHOTO COLLECTION OF RAYPIOND GARRISON, SHOWING
THE VOLUNTEER FIREMEN BEFORE MARCHING IN THE ANNUAL MEMORIAL DAY PARADES IN GREENWOOD LAKE.
rtThe ' Story of Greenwood
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Inc 0 r p 0 rat'ion
Everyoop. gathered at M:LIlturn's ~neral store
(the new namtl Qf the ' Pioneer Store) to m€et their
neighbors; pass the time of the day, and discuss
thehappeniDgs of the vUlage. There were many
things which had to be done. Roads were stUl un, paved, there was :19- m3m source of wat~r supply.
The v11lage dld not have eledric street lights. A
Volunteer 'Fire Department had been founded iri 1923;
they need~d ' equipment and could not rely only on
benefits and voluntary contributions to pay for the
equipll}ent -necessary to pay for the . protect~on of so .
many home s and businesses. ·It was time for Green,"
wood Lake to act.
A meeting was held to decide what could be done
and the citizens who ' had long dlScussed the future
of Greenwood Lake decided to move for the .only .
feasible solution•••• INCORPORATION! ·
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On January 13, 1924,- the people of Greenwood
Lake voted for incorporation. ~ev.mty-tw6 people
attended the meeting; tlie vote was 52 in favor, 20
voted against.
On February 20, the first~fage
officers were elected: Mayor, .John/:C. Mintum •••• 2Year Trustee Arthur E. Esche•••• 1 Year Trustee,
.John H. Galloway••••Treasurer (and Po~ice Justice),
Jame.; Tumer•••• Collector of Taxes, Harry J. Sudman •.•• VUlage Clerk~~ George Hubbard~ . The official ,'
birthday of the Village of Greenwood Lake was March
20, 1924.
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Marie Minturn Hix added to the "Curio & Art Shop" and built the Coffee Shoppe s~own in this picture. When
this was taken, Greenwood Lake had a traffic
light on Waterstone Road. ,
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' Greenwood Lake
Mayors
John C.Minturn
1924-1926 .
William A. Wright
1926- ~ 929
1929-19401
John C; Minturn
John A.Schleigh, Jr. 1941-1954
. William B. Phillips 1954~1955 .
Arthur- V. Lynch,
1955-1956
Wilbur E.Christman 1956-1961
Michael Scotti /~
1961-1961
Walton S. Trumper 1961-1962
Harry F. Foy, Jr.
1962~1969
Arthur Brueckner ' 1969-Present
Greenwood Lake Trustees
Arthw: E. Esche '
John H. Galloway
Peter M~thaler
Hany Sackett
John :C. Min!!Jm
Williain E; Utter
Charles
E. Hunter
John H. Miller .
Theodore . Greek
Jack Welchman
Walton Trwnper
Nicholas Piazza
Michael Scotti .
Edward O'Rourke '
Francis 'Lambert
Harry F. Foy
Jack Conklin
Jack C. Deer
FrecI Christman
Arthlr V. Lynch
Henry W. Su~an
Otto . Schulz
Alexander C. Bussey
Homer' Juby
. John Mallon
Geo~gePiencinski
William M. Carroll Jr.
Beniaid Winstanley
Jacli D'Avi
1924-1925
1924-1927
, 1927
1926-1930
1928'
1929:1954
1931-1947
1948-1919; 1961-1974
..:.. 1950-June,1958
1950-June 1958
1950-1956;
June 1958-Sept. 1961
1955(4 months) ".
1956; June 1958-Jan. 1961
1957-1958
1957-1958
1959-Mily 1962 .
1959-1960
.
March 1961 (1 month) ,
1961-1968
, .
Oct. 1961-1963
~ay 1962-1970
May 1963
1964-MilY 1967
Feb. 1968 (1 month)
1968-1969
1969-1974
1970 (9 months)
Dec. 1970-1974
, ~ 1971·1974
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This picture is an artist's r~ndition of the entranm to the
East~m
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"The Curio" was the low, rambling buit~ing adjoining John Minturn's store on Wind~mere Ave. It was ownai by
his sister, Marie Minturn Hix. The building was added to in the late 1920's, but this long, low portion is now the
.site of the law offices of Lud'merer & Vurno.
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T~e Old Heidleberg on Win~ermere Avenue, now owned by Mrs. .Kunnigunde Willner. The stables for the Moun-
tam Ice Company were behind here and the White Horse Inn was next door.
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When the lake waters were raised by the building of the dam, it was necessary to build a bridge across the East Arm.
This was known in the 1800's as the "Swinging Bridge". In order for boats to pass, the bridge was opened on a turntable under the center. The permanent structure known as Waterstone Bridge was dedicatedOin,l932 if! memory of
Edward T. Waterstone.
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ttThe
Vlllage Ordinances were published in June, and on
July 8, the first Vlllage Policeman was appOinted:
Artemus L. Beattie. ' The salary . in . those early
years was $100 a month, and a vehicle was hired only
when necessary. For all ,other expenses, the VU!age budgeted $500 , a year. \ By 1929, ther.e were tWo
motorcycles avaUable fot use, but all calls were.
answered in the policeman's own car. The first police station was located on Wlndemere Avenue, where
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Mr. Hugh MO.rris' · home is at present.
Under Mayor Minturn's direction, many improvements were made. Roads were paved, a vlllage water
system was established, and street lights were installed. ,With the exception of one term served by
Wllliam W,rtght (1926~1929), ,John Minturn. was Mayor
IrOl:)l, the incol'p9ratlon~W his death in 1941"at the
age of 88. ' During those few years when he was not
guiding the business of th.,e Village, John Minturn was .'
. instr,umeo~ in getting the new school ~. A vote
bad been taken in 1923, but the voters tumJaown the
proposition to build a new schooi and' decided fJistead
to divide the old school buDding into three rooms.
. This situation was remedied when the people tlnally
, decided in favor of a new buDding, to be buDt across
the 'street on Waierstone Road. The new stone school
house was opened in 1928.
But that was not the OO1y new buDding in Greenwood Lake. In 1927, the cornerstone for Holy Rosary
Roman catholic Church was laid. The congregation
·was a "mission" of st. Stephen's of Warwick before
this time, and Catholics in the comml1111ty attended
Mass in the ' summer ' by .taking the. steamboat to st.
Ma,ry's, Our Lady of' the-Lake ' Church in ' Sterling
for3st. In the winter, Mass was offered in the Playhouse on Sunday morning. Records of 30 years ago
show that Christmas Mass had only 45 adults and 19
chlldren present. For ma."lY years, there was only
one Mass on SUnday, even during the' summer months.
When the . church finally became a Parish, losing its
,mission status, · Monsignor Joseph Kennedy, who had
, been a parish priest in st; Stephen's 'in Warwick; was
,apPOinted Pastor of Holy Rosary. ,Today, under
Monsignor Wilfred Riordan, there are five Masses
offered on Sunday andpue 0::1 Saturday eveIPng. This
is to accomm,:}1ate the growIng membership which
has an average of 2000 people attending mass during
the summer.
St~ry of ~Gree n wood
La ke"
&REENWOOD LAKE SCHOO L - 1930. Miss Larkin (teacher), Ainsworth Cyphers, Buck sayer, Bob Gallant,
Larry Conklin, Walt Trum~er, Jack Larlh~m, Billy Hunt, Bill Fredricks, Art Finnegan, Lester Roosa, Beinard
Miller~ Bob (Pork) Ryerson, Carl Slaack, RossMUler, Roland Jadcson, Oliver LariharQ Frank Utter, Bob Utter,
Herman Donald, ,Jr., Miss Fecknl!r (teacher),Jthel Roo~~ Eileen-Hazen~achel Finnegan, Virginia Ja'ckson, Fran
Frances McCloud, Dot Wo.od, Marion Ball, Kay Gallant, Ov.&lIa Uttly, Howard Ryerson, Jerry Lynch (PrincipaJ),
. Jimmy Lane, Emma Sayer, Phyllis Sayer, Agnes Utter, Ruth Utter, Anna Hunt, (l/adys Conklin, Eddie-Utter, .
Jack Conklin,--Dick Finnegan, Joe Morgan, Ray Skinner,Fran'cis Foy; Ira Ryerson, Mildred Roosa; Viola Finnegan, Dot Putnam, Elizabeth Garrison, Lorraine Conkfin, Fitzsimmons, Pink Hilgers, ,ElSie RyersQn, Doris Skinner,
Babe Conklin, Elmer Hunter, Bobby Jackson, Henry Sudman, Harry Deer..
Wright's Saloon in the 1920's. The scene is Windemere Avenue (now the residence of Emma and Hugh Morris)
. looking toward Greenwood Park from the traffic light The home nexHO' it is now the site of Demerest's Lodge.
The Maplewood Inn Was, purchased by the' Greck's in 1924.
The Maplewood celebrates its 50th anniversary at the same
time as the Village of Greenwood Lake, In this photo, the
porch,
(wlich now seats"
dinner guests)
was not yet encloSed.
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Ad for.Jl restaurant of the 1920's. The ' :Inn'' is now the
Greenwood Lake News Building.
The stone school house was built in 1927. It watadded to in 1950; five additionaLrooms, the au~itorium ~I'!d
the cafeteria were built. Another addition was put on in 1961.
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. uTbe StOl'Y of Greenwood
Lake".
Th-e A·g e· o·f the Entertainers
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by Bob to speak and were Stlch a great ath'aetfon •
During thoSe years_ b3fore the Incorporation of
. the YWage, ther.e were manyfndications that the
people of· the community were wllHDg to.:work together
for the betterment of Greenwood L-ake. ' The Greenwood Lake Association, which began as a group of
businessmen jointly advertising the lake as a resort
became the impetus which finally led to inco.l"POra~
tion•. Whenever funds were 'needed, whether for the
Parish House of Good Shepherd Church or the newlyformed F.lre Department, or any other worthy cause;
tile resIdents and visitors were always wUling to lend
a hand in raising the' necessary money. One type of
fund raising which was always a big success was the
"live benefit performances" put on by the show
people, vaudev1lllans, and Broadway and European
staI:s who were here in Greenwood Lake
, There were many "show-stoppers"· in and around
the vUlage in those times. Whether on vacation
, visiting f~ends who had retired to open a busfness'
working at one of the hotels, or, just resting "be~
tween engagemeats" •••• The entertaJners ' fo1JJll!l4reeriwood Lake to be the ideal spot. ' .'
One ~ . the most famous " entertainers" of that
era was a true Greenwood Lake natlve."JOCICO,
the· Talking Crow" fell from the neXt One day onto
Bob. Karna'~ .lawn.
He and his mate were traJned
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at the Old Hippodrome In New York City, that the
\ Crows were Insured by the theater for$5Q,000. The
act was a smashing success. '
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. Other headliners who made Greenwood Lake ·thelr
. home were Royal Gascolgn~, father of Mrs. Dolly
Ragone, who Is a lifelongres.ldent and was a dancer.
Mr. Gascoigne was a comedian and Juggler who gave
, Command Performances for. King George V. Under
the -name "King Louis and Ergotte- the Great", Irene
and Herman Ergotte played -the :Palace! in 1910.
Mrs. , Ergotte , also danced with the great Pavlova.
When she settled in Greenwood ,Lake, Mrs. Ergotte ·
taught ballet and dance to the chUdren here and in
. Monroe.. Other noted residents were Herbert and
: i.~. Lloyd of Minstrel Fame, t1Je parents of Mrs.
Dolly ..A1Ston; and the "Amaranthe Sisters" who com~
bIned acrobatic and ballet d,ancjng•• Mrs. Nellie
Brandt was an acrobatic dancer; her daughter, Mrs.
Evelyn Pollerowas with the Llazeed Acrobatic Troupe
with Mrs. P~gy Viola.
'In the. early 30's, Joe 'J ackson and his Wife Margaret .came to visit in Greenwood Lake. Mrs. Jackson's mothe~ .ran a boarding house for actors and
show people laiown
Mother Rialto's, and the Jack~ sons like her c~lce of location. JOe Jackson was a
trlckblcyCle comedian known as, "Shoeless" . Joe
Jackson. He later teamed Up ,with'Jimmy Durante and
Eddie Cla.yton. "
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While bere in Greenwood Lake, he decided to open
a swank supper clUb; . he~ad already found the site••••
anold-barn .at the intersection of the New Monroe
Road and the Old MOJ1rOe 'Road~ The barn Itself y/as
a "personality" with a ,story· dating .back almost one
hundred years. John Hunt ~ed the land then; 156 .
a.cres of pasture land. ~ He bllilt his famtly hOIIJe at
the junction of Old Tuxedo .Road andthe .road leading
to Old Dutch HolloV4 . The home was a large.. one, six rooms andtwo
f1replaces~
He also built a carriage house. But the
biggest, nnd. ~ of the three, was th.e barn. •••blg .
enough to house a 30 cow herd .and four horses ••••
witll a hup hay 10ft at the top•••• hand hewn beams of
mighty four by fours, held rigidly in place with chisled
wooden pegs. It wasbuUt to last. But it was never .
painted. ~ neighbor, in the heat of an argument, had
'made the threat, "as soon as you get that barn painted,
Fm going to butnlt down." John Hunt didn't actually
beliE!Ve the neighbor would carry out the threat, but he
never did paJnt .the barn.
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Evelyn -Poltero, the Evelyn Brandt of the Liazeed
Acrobatic rroupe.
, -.JoeJaclcson' bought the buildings and qq1te a bit .
of land from WWiam Hunt, Sr. and started t-emode11ng. The downstairS (the stables) became "the longest bar in the eastern Un,lted States", with -a dance
PlaybiHs advertising a benefit performance. The origi·
n,als are owned by Mrs. Margaret Ston~ouse, whose
father was Bob Kama. Tommy Stoneh ouse 'owned
'~Sy's landing" 00 the east shore and had an act call. ed 'Liogan~ long." -
The Brjstol House was once the home of the Amaranthe family.
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"The Storx of Gi'eenwoo'ct Lake"
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floor Just off from it. ' The hayloft became the ban,quet room, and the windows were shaded. with striped .'
awnings. Outside. was the bold legend, '~JOE JACKSON'S CASINO". . But the barn remained unpa1nted~
Like many show business personalities,.the charm
and charisma which electrified audiences from the
stage, was just not ·there when .confronted by the
'many problems Of owning a business. Joe JaeksOD
, bad the enthusiasm, and he dreamed Ofown!ng a
restaurant wl;1ere show people would congregate as
custolllers and entertainers, but it just didn't work
out t~ way. The casino ~asn't too sticcesstul, but
he kept it open while he rettirn$d to his act and Broad- .
way. His ·last appearance was at the ~xYTheater
in New York City in 1942.
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Upon his death, his son ~erlted the casino. Joe
Jackson, Jr. was also in show business as aD.acrobat. 'He solct-.the caSino to Danny and Evelyn Ponero
in the late 1940's. The casino was remodeldagain,'
and\...t he name was changed to "DANNY'S~'. For the .
next few years, it was the "in" place in GreenwOod ·
Lake.. Ads describing tile entertainment, and 1te~s
which told of the "events", never gave the location
of the restaurant. If you !11dn't ~w it, you~J'en't
with the "in" .crowd •••.•••••• The barn was, still unpainted.
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Danny was a born showman. Not in show business,
but the kind of person who knows haw to run a restaurant and make everyone feel that they are part
of the business.· The place was alive w1t~ activity.
People would drop in for a 'friendly brew and stay
to help behlnd the bar, or wait· on tables if there
- was a sudden nish; In the banquet room upstairs,
live bands added to the festive mood of the Firemen's Dinners .or a wedding reception.
, But Just when success was assured, t.ragedy struck.
DannY's heart couldn't stand the pace and his doctor
ordered him out or the business. N:ot" ease.,off", but
"sell .immediately." So once 'again, the rugged old
bam was sold. The new owners, Mlldred Smith and
partners were from New Jersey. They chang-ed the
name to the "Old Homestead" and, oPened for busi-.,
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Travelling trained animals. quartered on Jersey Averue
near Dr. Schlossman's home. One of the earliest enter1ainers to visit Greenwood lake.
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The Linden;House Crew in 1957.' Evelyn PoilerQ center front·
~~y Viola on her left. Mrs. Pollero's mother, N~lie Brandt '
IS In the second row~
ness.
By now, nobody commented- at all that the
. outside was not painted. . It "as an accepted faet~
The n~w owners lacked' th~ inde1lnsble" some·. ,
thing" that makes a business a success.
Instead
of being '''the -place", it WaR "just anOther place~',
and after a little while, it began to run down and
ftnally closed altogether. The barn stood idle and
empty for a short whlle.
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In ·1955, the' JewiSh members of. the comml.ll11ty
who had . been holding services at the Recreat1o~
Hall,beganto look for awrmanent home and they
decided upon the old unpa1Jited barn. WitJi. a tre-'
mendous etlort and personal contrfbutlon on the · part
of many charter meDibers, the barn w1uJ once 8ga1n
remodeled and . improved. ~ut1fnl new steps and a
front patio were made, and knotty pine paneling covered ~ old beams. . A .modem kitchen was added
and the o~d : haylOt:: and lanquet room became the
sanctuary. The barn .seems to have found its desUny. Four times it has been altered and remodelec,I, and today it stands••••a stark white bulldlDg with
cathedral type stained glass windows, and '3bove its
entrance the blue star of David which 1dentUles It
as the Jewish CommtJD1t.y center. The building 18
~l alive with the futt and good fellowship of the
years before, . as it Is the home for social activities as' w~l as a ' House of Worshlp. In additi9R to
regular Saturday morning Sabbath · services, there
are dances; testimonial dinners, IUlJcheons; bazaars .
. and the simple enjorment of Just being together for
a while. .AND THIS TIME, the outsIde · has been
painted•
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The. barn on John Hunt's farm. The far~was 136 acres extendinl.up the Old Tuxedo Road The barn in later years. Parts of the farm were sold after John-Hunt's·death. A parcelwas
to the Me/yer's Estate (Hartman Home), up the Old Dutch Hollow Road past Point 'lookout; set asideJorthe Greenwood lake cemetery. Mrs. Ann Hunt Agolia still owns part of this
property. The family. moved to the village in the' early :~O's.
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up the New Monroe Road to the Ryerson farm.
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The Rocket Flight
The . years after incorporation were busy ones lor
Greenwood Lake. There were not too many open lots
left on Windermere Avenue. In 1930, the Atl~t.ic and·
Pacific Tea Company bullt a red brick buUding there
betWeen oat and Elm StreetsO>u:llding neJit to Greenwood 'Lake News) and Indian Park campsites were
selling for $150, for a lot 40 feet by 200 feet. At
·the other end , of the lake, Lakelands lots (with beach
rights) . were advertised as '<50 feet by,; 125 feet for
only $400." tn 1934, MrS.l<iaPosten took over the
duties · of postmistress from Mrs. Artemus Beattie,
and Mathi!da Wright and Charles Hallock worked in the
post office 'OIl Windermere Avenue in the little Wllding next to Raynor's Market: The Buzzer had as its
columnists, Adeline Miller' and.. ~hur .1(Bud) Lynch,, ' /
ana .he and Arnold Lee ~eptuR a running "feud" 1n
tpe paper for the entire summer.
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During tlJ.ose years, the Greenwood Lake News ..
letter- was published by George ' W, Green of West
Milford and Brooklyn, and items were taken by Mrs.
Harold BaU in her store "The Ball Shop" (now Hanley's). The Greenwood Lake Taxpayers AsSOCiation /
succeeded in having signs put up OIl the Jersey Roads
to direct the way to Greenwood Lake. They also denounced the Greenwood Lake Vlllage Board for baving
turned down the resolution to establish a plann~g and
zoning board.
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'I'he>~laY.house. .wassllm!fingM~~W!!st.tn, ~'G.o1n~ ..
to Town" in 1935., This was the year our Greenwoo1
Lake P. '1'.0. was formed. Beauford Dunn was operating "Dunny's Rio Grande" ·onWin!;iermere Avenue,
- directly across from the Dutch Bakery. and the A&P,
The Morn1Iigside Country Club, located on the east
/ shore near the Jersey bordp.r, advertised Its affiliation witii' the "Morningsld,<! Residence Club, an excluSive club of New York pty."
.
within a few shQrt months, the Morningside Coun. try Club guests would be ~ltnessing a "first" iIi the _
history of aviation: the first successful delivery of
. mail by rocltet fl1g~t. The flight had been scheduled
for Februarj 9, '1936. It was delayed because of
technicalities until February 23, 1936',
'
.
. More. than 700 people . walted on that bitter cold
day.
Winter gales and dipping temp''3ratures had
piled I the snow high on the land, but the icy winds
had swept the frozen .lake surface clean during the
six hour walt before the flight, Newsreel cameraipen and photographers from all the news services
had been .1nvited to attend the launching; they were
impatient ~th. t~ long walt, and almost frozen as
solid as ,the Ice on which they' were standing.
, Fred Kessler of the Rocket Airplane Corporatioo .of New York City was Utending to last minute
details. . Through his afflliation with stamp collecto,rs' clubs, the nec,:!ssar'y backing for the fiight
was obtained.
A s~lal "first cover" would be
. Sssqed",.to ~I;.k the,{).~casI.OIl.' ··WhUe..M1k~ ,Morln,of
sterling Forest, the designer ahd constructor of the
rocket's catapUlt, !las checking out his ~ of the
operation, the inventor of the rocket, Dr. WIDy Ley
!# Berlin, Germany, was already attending to the
two J)lanes.
Dr, Ley woUld later· become an important advisor in the United States.' Space Program.
The two planes were naIIl~ "Gloria I" and
"Gloria II" in honor \Of John Schleich's young daughter, Mr. Schleich was a sponsor of the expertment.
He woUld later serve.. Greenwood Lake as Mayor for
thirteen years. His daughter, · Gloria (Quackenbush),
was walting to· christen the two planes, bu~ by the
time everythlng was in readiness, the champagne
had frozen in the bottle, sO the planes were christened with a tin cupful of snow.
. The fuel for' the planes, cannisters of liquid oxygen, had been delivered all the way from Jersey
City · by Jack . Welchmll.n. Skidd{ng and sl~d1ng OD
the icy roads throughout the trip, Jack was unaware of the danger of transporting this type of
fuel. One bad bump coUld have sent Essex, cann1s- .
ter, and Jack to "Kingdom Come". It was only
. after he had delivered the mixture that he learned
of the true nature of his perilous journey.
.
When all was ready, 6,149 letters with 161Y air
mail stamp;; attached, were placed in aflre-proo!
mall sad!: and loajed into the Gloria I. The pl~e
was put on the catapault and the fIlel ignited. 'Ihe
plane flew .abo,ut . l~p y~ •..:l;Ild ~~~~~d .a~os~
·dive, crashing to tl\e ice. , The second 'plane was
48-
tiThe Story -of Greenwood Lake"
tbeo loaded and Dr. Ley Ignited the sblp's rockets.
The "Gloria II", launched without.. the use of tbe .
catapaul,t, slddded along the ice, rose Into the air,
and llew .about 300 yards before co~ down with
a crasb. ••• OIl the other side of the State -Une. The
flight was considered by ail to be successfUl. PoslmasterW-alter Wbite 0( Hewitt, : N~ : Jersey picked •
up the mail sack and carrled the letters totbe New
Jersey Post Of1lce, where be cancelled those offlclal
"Rocket airma11 stamps" accord1Dg to Post OMce
-regulatiOO$.
The roeket and Its night . were tbe protot~ of
those which would soon be seen over England, as Nazt
Germany uDleasbed tbe V-I and _V-2' rockets~ •••bUzz ' .
bombs••••1D tbe attempt at world dominatton;- 'Tbe
/
flight pattern was slmtlar, too. A take-off, a gltde.
then a ~den halt In the end, preparatory to tbe swift
, descent to the 'grouad . below. Tbts Is slgnUlcant
considering that, a · few years der that first filght
OD the icy cold day, Dr. Ley's meso were broken.1Dto
~ bts o11g1naI plans: ~len~ T!1~ . 000~UDaj,or ~~e
to thoSe later was ffie addition of a radio-control
' mechanISm, and a, cbange In .tbe n>eket flr1ng chamber whicballowed forlODg-dlstimce fllgbt. .
The rocket which flew at Greenwood Lake·is , stnl In the possessiOD of Mike Mor1ll's famUy, who
. ltve In Ster11ng Forest. The SmitbsODbn Instltate .
In Wasb1ngton has ,s~wnan iDterest in ~e plane
torose'ln .its. archives. but the Morfn's do not want
Newsmen braving the cold, waited six hours with the spectators for the rockeHaunching.
The "Gloria II" takes to the air on its way tD becoming'the first U.S.
rocket airmail flight in history: The roc;ket was launched Feb. 23, 1-936.
,
Jack Welchman made a dangerous journey to
and from J~rsey City, N.J.; to transport cannisters of higJlIy explosive liq!Jid-oxY'gen to
the launching site.
','
to part with' it. Dr. Ley, who spent loog years w~th
the space , program, died In a Queens,N.Y•. hospital In 1969. Fred Kessler, who coot1nued bts work
with roekets .and . plaJies, also died In ManlJasset,
11) 1963.
'
"
.raCk Schleicb, wboJJecameMayor In .1-941, stnl
ltves .lD Greenwood Lake at, bts bomelnGreenwood
Park. Mrs. Gloria Quackenbusbalso ltv-es with -.her
famUy In Greenwood Lake, .and is ODtbe sta1t of the
Greenwood Lake District SchooL Jack Welchmanretired from buslnua this past year, and ltves wltb bts
. wife, Jane, on Walnut street. '
. .
loading the fire- proof mail sacks.
The monument,commemoretingthe rocket flight, will
be rededicated and placed in front of the new Village
.offices on Church Street.
,\.
-(
Preparations for launching.
Gloria Schleich (Qulllckenbush) christening the "Gloria
I" with a tin cup fuJI of,snow. The champagne had
frozen in t.he bottle.
"The Stor.y of Greenwo~d
50
Lake"
T'h e War .Years
,
Jack Welchm:m's first business In Greenw.lod Lake
was an unusual one. He bad. a travelllng bUtcher shop.
Using a refrigerated truck, Mr.W ,~lcbman would take
orders from Greenwood Lake reSidents, drive to pick
up the meat, and deliver it to the door. He opened
"Jack's Market" on Windermere Avenue (Riley &.
R~ey Accountants t,oday) an::! . was in bUsiness over
thirty years. Right next store to Jack's Market ,w?};
al:iamburger stand, "Dunny's". The open-air stand
had a woo;ien c'anopy to protect those who seated them,·
selves on the wooden kegs which were on the sideWalks. facing the counter. (Both buildings were advertised as being "opposite the Grand Union" In
1941. ••• the A&P was. no longer in Greenwood Lak~.)
Whenever there W'lS a parade' or av111age celebration, folks would line up iIi front of Dunny's to stand
In the shade and watch the marchers. In 1939, the
line of marchers was enlivened by ,tHe. "Recr.eation
GirlS Corps of Greenwood Lake, N.Y." ,0'.11' first·
brum and Bugle Corps. The 'first mem'i:>;u-s w.~re:
Alice Garrison, Arina 'Ringwlg, R'lth CarlsOil,'l!mlhp.r~
ine Henry, L111ian Ringwlg, Ruth Cosm:m, Elsie Garrison, Barbara Meyer, Jean Hunter, Mildred Wilmer,
Mary Wilson, Helen Conklin, Doris Skinner, D9lan1a
Conklin, .Mildred Sudman, Eleanor Saq.::l::!ers, Jung
C~lson, Cecilia WHIner, Norm2_ Carls:)o. At,"'llp.s De··
Boer, Ruth Garrison, Ellen ·Foy, Evelyn DeBoer,
Marjorie Burt, Joan Schuster, Dorothea Put~;lm, Beatrice' Smith, CaimenGonzalez, Jean McIntosh, Vera,
Smith, Isabella Hilgers, E;dJla Cyphers.
.
In the summer ·of 1941, Greenwood Lake was jus!
like any other village in the United States. The ~'War ,
in Europe" WM far away, andror many, life continued
. as it had. for years before.
The young men had
formed-a baseball team and played throughout the
area, travelling to Monroe,Warwlck,or any other
village which would book a game. , For them, the war
in Europe had a great effect on their lives. The
team would Oegin to break up as more and 'more'
men of the village went into service. Buck Sayer,
Dick Finnigan and Stillman Weaver were to leave
that August. Private James DeBoer was an aviation mechanic in the' Army Air Corps, and would
SOl);} be leaving for MassachUsetts Institute of Technology for . further training. Private Carl Putnam
was in school at Chanute Field; illinOis, and Private Howard Ryerson had just been assigned to Ml.tchell Field, N.Y.
The Playhouse waS ' showiilg Abbott and Costello
in "Hold That Ghost" that summ,~r, and' visiting
the. lake was a "James Durante", ~ master of ceremonies at one ' of Brooklyn's prominent night clubs.
Durante's Act was known as the "Jolly Six". At th~
LOng Pond, Murchio's Tra1n1ng Camp, T.am1 M1.uriello was training andputtmg on -sparring exhibi~ions. . -rp.e Training , Camp was familiar I' to all the
boxers of that era, as champions ~d "war-horses"
alike came to Greenwood Lake' to" train before a
match. - -Flghters--.of such stature as . Bob Fitzsim- .
mons used to train at W. B. Phillips' home in Forest Park before the Long Pond Camp opened.
In the summ,?r of '41, the Castle Tavern invited
everyone to take a "walk through hell" by visiting
the Schmitz Art Exhibition' of Dante's Inferne. There
w'are benefit dances for various organizations. The
Bran::!o:l House was re-openingafter a f1re~_ and
oW!ler P-arc Ward~n W·?S giving the proceeds o! o~~­
ing nIght to the m.lSic1ans who had lost all their instruments and music In the flames. , Joe Jackson,
Jr. arranged for his casino to be used for a b~e­
fit dance for St. Anthony Commlmity Hospital, aild
Nkk Ke,1ny and his ' radio ga.'lg were spo:lsoring ' a
gala night at the Cocoanut Grov·a, with all prQCe~ds
to go to the .Greenwuo::! Lake Fire Department. Association notices in the Buzzer told of George ,
Horn playing third base for the Indian Park Softball
team; Claude Pembleton's golf drIving range was
opened and customers were teeing off.
The United States entered the Se;:ond World War
in 1941. -Seventy men ' and two w0rIl,gn left Greenwood Lake to serve in the armed forces. Two did
not return. Arthur Finnegan, a non-commissioned .
officer, . who was born and raised in Sterllng Forest, died in the invasion of France. J. Clinton Mi.nturn nr, grandson of the first Mayor of Greenwood
Lake, was a -commissioned officer who lost his life
. in the invasion of Italy. When the American Legion
was chartered in 1947, the members would vote to
nam-o' the Post, "The ' Finnegan-Minturn ' P':lst," but
at. the re<rJest of Mi'". Minturn, the name . would' :>e
the "Greenwood Lake Arthur ' FtnDegan Post 1443."
. The American Le-gion met . in the Recreation Hall
in 1946 and· 1947. When they receiyed their charter,
Bob Parker becam:i? the first commander. In 1949,
the Legloil purchased !:he property for the post hom~
from Joe Jackson, Jr. He favored the Legion with
a very good . price.
Years later, when lakefront
was selling at $100 a.foot,Joe would sell 65 foot of
lakeftont to the Post for a TOT A~ of $100.
.
Jack's Meat Market and Dunny's onWindermere ,Avenue. The building to the left is now known as Murphy's
Park Inn. Dunny's was torn down to make way for a brand neW building, the (Avington) Lake Pharmacy , owned
by Mr. Joseph Rampe.
. .
. ~'
. The Girls Recreation Corps in 1939.
The fim organized baseball team in· Greenwood~ake. Kneeling, LJo r., Carl
Sfaack, Robert Utter, Jess Donald, Alan Brown, Ed Sayer, Buck Sayer. Standing, I: to r., Jim Sayer, Bernie Miller, Watt Trumper; Gus Rathner, Hans Rathner,Tom Donald.
Uniforms were a little different'in the day's ofihe' fi
Arthur Finnegill. The Greenwood Lake
American Legion Post was name in his
memory.
~ ,-
52
"lhe Story of Greenwood, Lake"
••
.'and
In the years follo"N-mJ tbe V{:..r, Grea.'lWu-:xi La.lte
W01Ld .~xperlell':e the mIxed reaction of a. p90ple who
had , O:lce .thought. "This can never happen to us."
Some wanted oilly to settle down in peace and quiet.
Others were eager to begin again after,' the long, ,.
lean years of gas rationing, food rationing, shortages, u,ncertaln~y, an1 sadne3.s. lI'here 7wre th0S2
\
whj ware always ready to blJild •••• a no~w hom.~, .a
new busi~ess, 8 . . . . a· new idea!
.
In Lakelands, building was the by-word. Lots
were being sold with log cabins. featured as the
"place to get away from it all." The Greellwood
Lake P·:>lice Force re;:eived its first p')l1ce ;:ar.
Now that "blaci<o:1ts" Wl'e over, and people could
get out in the e;renings, community organiZations
began agam.
"
_ Mr • .Sal Ragone becam.~ the new editor- publisher
of the ;Buzzer, and, ' not long alter, was Wl'iting about
the first Girl Sco'lt ' TrooJ in Greenw:>o:>1 La.te. Mt'S,
Bm:t begil the ktndergarte;J. pro~ram (l:l th.~ Library
steps. She used the Recreation Hall for classes in
the winter.
During the years of the fifties, th~ . Buzzer would
Ruth revisiting Greenwood Lake on. a drive for the war effort during the mid-1940's.L. to r., ~~rs. Leibolt,
carry many items which would 'have a great effect
Dolly Ragone, Jane Welchman, Evelyn ,~jnturn, Babe Ruth, Florence Ryerson. Bud Hilgers, Louise Christman, ,
on the p'eople of Greenw'Jod Lake. In 1952, City
Bertie L.eng. ,
,.
' .
-In .. es~inJ' Compa."lY acquired 2'7 S::llare mnes ot property .from the Harriman . family.
The land was
almost the exact tract of the Sterling Ironworks.
In the ,days between the .closing of the furnaces in
1891, until the seco:lj ' World ' War, the mUles and
· fUrnaces iay tl1used, with o:lly a car~tak~r to gall'd
the once- b~y area. The mInes o~e:l.~d btiefiy d~r­
ing the .war years, but W'i!re not econom.tcilly f'easIble to. operate. City Investing upveiled a pIan for
the area which ,called . for residences and industry,
side by side, b:rt completely sep'lrate. By leaving
. the surrounding trees and foliage untouched. and
'adding 131Jdsc.aping to ;>rotect the resid,mces lrem
,the comm·,~rc1a.l sites,' they . presented a site plan
, for a "tofal" commlmity. Today. ma,ny of Greenwood Lake's residents are employed at the "Gardens" (as the entire complex is referred ::0). Tucked
away from ~1:le sight of the busy fou! -lane highway,
which was .buut from Route 17 to the entrance' of '
Sterling Forest 'Gardens in the 'l~.te siXties and early
, seventies. are the homes desigU~ to fit f!!.e lots
on which they sit• . Visitors to SterlJD'g Forest Gardens are unaware of the homes and 'i ndustrial developm"!nt corporations which surround the r,nagnUlcent
floral displays they com~ to' view.
__
.
In the vmage of Greenwood Lake, in 1954, an
organization was formP.d which would b.g O.:le of, the
busiest and m.;st-,atlpretiate'j from the tim"; of its
inceptioo. Under the sponsorship of the Greenwood Lake Lions Club, and with the impetus commg from
Color Guard for a legum Parade StandIng in front of the School on- WaterStone Ro!d L'to r, Danoy Pol/ero (deceased)
Mr. WUbur Christman and M,r. Harrison Ebllg. the.
Art Mann, Bucky Sayer, H,arry Foy, ~harres Burt. . _
'.
. " ,
Gx:eenwOOd L~ Ambulance, Corps was incorpOl'ated.
The nrst president was Harrl:so:l EhUg. Mrs. Marg~
MUleI'
e1ecled 'VJce Presldent, and Treasurer
was Mr. Harold Conkl1no Jr• .
The Greenwood Lake Police Department m"lVed
into a ' police booth 'a t ·the corner of Good Shepherd
ChUrch.
Th~ Lake was n,)w so busy that 24-hour
patro:s .were pla:.med for the w.~ek~n.t;, Radios were
') lnstalle(l ·i n police cars ' with transmJssion from station-to-cars only. .The Police Department wouIs!
occupy the little bootb on the cOl1ler until 1969 when
they moved into the present location on Church Street.
• Twenty-fo'lr lmur patrols ware" ~h~ everyday rule
by that time; the l:Jlslness p.~;>le and reslden~ had
petitioned th~ Village Board for fUll protectio.n a few
years before. .
- ' .
During the Mies, the young people discovered
the Lake. .Cottages were rented by the :w~e}(. the
month, or for the eLitire summer to' groups ot,s)!:!retaries, clerits. typlsts •••• and the "Rockaway Crowd'"
jammed into the Shamrock, the Linaen House, Allen'§.
· and Andre's. .The "Paddock" was off limIts in those
· days, as the proprietor would saY,uYou're too young_
for this plac-e, ' no m'.liter wha;. YO'lr proof o! age
says!"- Th"LLa.lte Diner was opeh 24 hours a day in
those times"", and was the place to meet for "breakfast" before going h0Itie . at4 a.m. to cat-ch some
sleep. Sunday night was '! Amateur Night" at the
Lakeland Ilin, and at Humphrey's, yo:! ' ::O'l ld waar
a craZy h.'lt, attenj :i m~.squerade p'lrty. and watch
a "rubber spider" fallon some unsuspecting young
girl from its perch over the bar.
The Montelac was Greenwood Lake's oBly... Chi.
.
,
nese Restaurant during those years.
The Swiss
Boy Scouts during
'50s~ In the last row are John Miller, Eagfe Scout; Art DenBleyker, a District Official;
cottages featured "h·)m" coo~dng" by . Mrs. V01p.~.
A! the Bluebird. May stahl insisted 0:1 "no B~rm\lda ·
John Miller, Scoutmaster; Wesley Dickman, Eagle Scout.
·
',,
"
. ' .
shorts" 'after 6 p.m.; so those who were not adI
mated would hop Into the car · and drive to the M:>untain Lakes Inn to 'hear "The Knockouts." The Br andon was always knoW'.J, to the crow·j as "the place
w!1ere 'Ba·.:>e Ruth , ~ayed" whenever he vislted the
lake, and a stop at the pavillion was part. of every
night's program,.
.
No matter hoy.' late a person stayed out the night
Qefore, they were up in time to watch the workouts
at the LO:lg Pond Inn. One week it would be Sugar
-Ray Ro'Jin5n. a;.1,:)I;her it m~~ht be Archle M )Ore
ot 3andy Sajdler. .Paddy DeMarco 'and Billy Gra-,
ham w~re also training there ,during the fifties. In
the tradition set by Joe LOuis, the~e famous men
were not just v1s1ting at. Greenwood Lake, they becartlt~ part. of the commnity.
Floyd Patterson would
sh:>p in the Town
80untry supermarket, and walk
back to the camp surrounded by the youngsters he
was teaching to box. Sugar Ray would drive by in his
purple Cadillac c;onvertible and stop to talk to som·?one-he knew in' -one of the shops,.
In 19j4, John Schleich resign.e.:l as Mr.yor an.1
W. B. Phillips,wll0 had been Village Clerk for 29
years~ was appointed the new Mayor.
Wfillam -Utter
becam,~ acting Mayor in the interim.
Bill had been
Village Trustee for 25 years~ and as Water CommisSioner, h'id been overseer as thousands of feat of water
pipe were Instilled to service the many homes w!llch
May~r J~hn Schleich throwing o,ut t~e first ball of the 1950 ~ason at. the first game played by the Amelican Legion Team. .
wanted a Year-round water supply. The village had
At right IS AI Brown. To the left, Amsworth Cyphers and Mike Scotti.
'
groW~l so much in a 'generation that a new water fil~~~--",'."~"'''''"~~~~''''I.~~~ ~~~. . 'II.~'~~'-"~~';:'~~""'~~:;:-"""""""'~""'. """'''''~'' ' '''''~''''' ''''''''''~"''''''''''';'
m
\
Later
,
the
~
,
aM
54
'tration plant was open~d on the East shoi~.
When Paul Martin and ,Robert M",l llen purchased
the entire corner of W!.n1ermere Avanu·a ' and Waterstone Road, tl!ey had l>lans t9 use the little post office ,building for office space. " A new Post Office
Building was built further down Windermere Avenue
an~ opened ' in 1954. Kay and Harold Ball built a new
"Ball $h'op," and O':1ce again the main s~reet of the
vUlage took ,on a: new !oo~{. Th,~ "BaliShop"oi)ene,j
in ,1955, the same year of the dedication of,the Mo)nu- '
ment and Honor Roll, in mem,:>ry of the mow in the-=-Armed Services. It is here, instead of at the cem,~- '
,tery, where Memorial Day Services' are held,followed by the , march to the American , Legion where
commemorative speeches are given. ,
As it 'is now" the Recreation Hall was then the
scene -Of meetings for many groups and organizatiQns.
The charter for the Cub Scouts was ,accepted there
in , 1955, ,and 'Ed,ward Schradin received the Eagle
Scout Award with 'Gold Palm in the ' ::;ame place.
On, an evening in February; 1956, nearly 40 people
gathered in' the Recreation Hall to discuss the for--=mation ' of a Lutheran Church in Greenwood Lake.
A petition with over 100 nameS was presented, to
Rev. Howard Lehnerdt, Field Missionary, to pre- ','
, sent to the Board of Missions of the United!fmtberajl
Syn~ of New York for approval.
The first service was held in the Recreation ,
H3ll on Easter Sunday of 1956 with 112 congregants
in attendance. Regular services began in May with
Pastor Howard Arenhardt, field missionary, guidIng
A committee had been ' formed
the congregation.
.;. to help in the formation of the new palish, with Inge'
, Montlck, Henry Lautz, Edna ' Salvidge, HOmt1r Juby
l and ,William Sommers serving on the , committee.
As the list of members grew, the nain-es of Jo!m
Ehrhardt, Alice Quackenbush, Ethel Weeks, Carol
Foy, Edna, Ehlig, Hugo Belz, and Louisa Sayer would
be , added to form the first council. ll}, Decem~er,
a constitution and by-laws were adopted, and the
congregation was -formally organized with 79 char" tel' members and 105 baptized mefnl:ers. Pastor
Leonard Nelson was the first pey manent pastor.
With the purchase of the corner property on Waterstone Road 'arid Linden Avenue from Herman and
Helen Kobboenbring. the congregation ,made ' plans for
the new church, and in October of 1961, the rite, of
,entrance and the first " service was ·, h-eld. Pastor
Nelson was succeeded by Pastor James Harrison,
and then by Pastor Robert Feist who served for siX
y'ears. The Rev. Donald Billeck was chosen . by the
church council when Pastor Feis,t left to serve in
Liberty..
'
.
The year. after Grace Lutheran Evangelical Church
was organiZed, !l- grot.1>,of men met in the Linden House '
to form the nucleus of the ElkS' Club. B.!,.O. E.
#206'7 began shortly after. In 1960,- they moved into
- their lodge, and meetings have been held here ever
since. 'The Elks service the cgllll1l'7>.'11fY qUietly .in
m:my ways, both their annlial Charity Ball and 'Children's C)~ristmas Party, held at the lodge, are!
well-kriowll events in Greenw.'JodLake. In the past
few years, renoVations to the lodge - have made 1t
a sought- after hilll for other organizations to hold
.
annual dinners there.
The fifties saw the return of sightseeing boats
to Greenwood Lake. ' Speedboatrld~s ware popular,
but the stern-wheeler run, operated by Captain William Boon, accomodated 50 p~sengers a day. Even
Hurricane Hazel 'and ' Hurricane Connie- could not
dampen the ' spirits of vacationists. When the burricane caused the lake to lise 20 inches above normal,
the "evening' simply began a little earUer, as eve!"yone moved indoors. With attractions such as Rose and
Dan M,~Carthy at Gertrude .and Herbert's, -and Josie
McCormack at, the piano at' Cocoanut Grove, a , little
, rain didn't stop anyone.
'
Another popula'l" group, the Greenwood LakE! Little
Theatre, was rehearsing "Bell, Boc;>k and Candle"
at that time. Although Grace Kelly waS starring 0':1
the screen in: "Dial M .tor Murder" at the Playhouse,'
it presented no competition to out owh amateur actors
and actre~ses. TttOse were also the years of the
Bicycle 'Races, 62 miles accomplished by ~irc1ing
the lilkeas many times as /required. Six m,~mbers
of the U. S. Olym;>ic Team joined 72 other contestants
in the race which' began .near the Lakeland Inn and
ended_ at Ten · Eyck Avenue and Route l7A (after
circling the lake, of course). Shm1er races "w'~re
held for the less proficient.
Greenwood Lake's own ph~rmacy opened about
that time, the beginnings of year;.round service now
provided by the Lake Pharmacy was originally in
the ':'Forbes Building", now the home of the Greenwood Lake News. A separate Red Cross Chapter
was organized, and the County National Bank opened
a ,b ranch in the building next ,to the Post Office ....
not the big white building presently occupied, but
a , little house which was later moved next to Mr.
McGinley'S offices. , Moving houses was not a new
thing in Greeilw'Jod Lake. The house on Waterstone
Road" just down from Windermi~re Avenue, once occu'pied the lot where the Lake Diner is, and the diner part
of Edson's (the Night , Owl) is now on New Monroe ,,'
Road. It was a diner until these past ,few years. It
is now a brlcked hom.,.
,
'
\
.
III 1959, Greenw'Jod Lake celebrated its 35th Birthday. For weeks prior to the weekend of September 19th, '
, the mel! grew beards in preparation for the' festivities,
and the -women planned special costumes for the
occasion. There w'a re motorboat races and otitdoot
dancing.
The "Lady of the Lake", Miss Arlene
Ferrara, '\Vas chosen from 20 contestants in the
beauty _pageant. The parade on Sunday included fony ,
antique auto., and the U. S. Air Force Band from
Stewart Air . Force Base, along with floats and youngsters who paraded with their pets. May~r Wilbur
Christman presented Tex Antoine, "Uncle Weathby", ,
with the key to the Village, and the Greenw'.)()(\ Lake
WaterSki Club put 0.':1 1U1 exhtb1tio:l.
'
, A1ter the -judges decided on who had the "best"
beards, it was time for the "Shave- Ofr" Derby.
The award of most "unusual" bo~ard w'~nt to Harry
Ehlig, while Joe Recca's was deemed the most "useful"
beard.
John Reynolds w'.)n a prize for the " b,~st
I
lakelands Orchard as :it looked in the)940s. Rudy Schmidt's hOme was the first in this section, on the corner of Birch
an~ Lake Drives. It is now the home of the Napolitanos. '
,
. ,
Official dedication Of the first Greenwood Lake'Ambulance presjlnted by _the Greenwood Lake Lions Club.
A,di-Aner for ~he Greenwood Lake Volunteer Ambulance Corps was given by Frank and ~~ary Benz at the Linde rv
House. Those attending the affair were; 1. to r., seated, rv"rs, Jack Andresen, ~nrs. Herman Eckhoff, ~~rs. VVilbur
Christ!llan, Wilbur Christ~an, Har.dson Ehlig, Mrs. Harrison EhHg, IV'rs. Irene Keogh, 'and ~rs; Robert Harrington. '
Standing, I. to r., Ross Miller, Frank Benz, Jack Andresen, Mrs. Frank Benz, Dr. Amtew Hicks, Mrs. Andrew Hicks,
St~e Nagy, ~1rs. Steve Nagy, HarolifBaH, Max Schuster, William Vogel, Mrs. Max Schuster, ~.nrs. Ross f.~ ill er, Fred
Christman, 1\, rs. Hugh Morns, Herman Eckoff, Hugh Morris, Barbara Morris, Mrs. Thomas Weeks, Thomas Weeks
and Robert HarrinjJton. (Warwick Valley Dispatch photo of July 7, 1954)
,
Spike petro on one of the motorcycles used by the
Greenwood Lake Police Dept. to patrol the Village.
-
,~
'-
'
An ea!ly photo o(the Greenwood Lake Police Dept. Fro'nt row, I. to r., William Cyphers, John. Trumper, Lester
Fredncks. Rear, I. to r" Artemas Beattie, Elmer Hunter, Joseph R,ecca, A~'arcellus Brown, Capt Ray Gradale and
Mayor of Greenwood Lake and Chief of Police, William B. PHilips. (Warwick Valley Dispatch Photo)
'-- .
tfThe
56
Story -of
Greenwood
Lake"
Henry Armstrong and Joe Murchio, Jr. Armstrong was only one of the many
"champions" who made Greenwood Lake the "home of the boxers."
Joe MurchioSr. ta'kes Joe L6uis for a ridelnone of bismany antique cars. The Antique
.Autc Museu;n is Still operated on Jerse.y Avenue by Mr. Murchio's widow, H~lena.
After his workout, Floyd Patterson would give the .youngsters oJ Greenwood Lake boxing lessons. The
sign says "Tomorrow's Champions" - Russell "Satan"
Pollero, Tony "Shorty" Chila, James "Number One
Son" Fioretti, Ray "Geronimo" PollarD, Robert
"Atlas" LaPirte. Patterson waS training at Long Pond
for his fight with Tommy "Hurricane" Jackson at the
Polo Grounds.
trimmed" and Jolin Ehrhardt for the "handsomest".
Ed O'Rourke's was the "longest". The Shave Off
Derby was won by Ernie Ma.bee who fInished in
2 minutes and 6 seconds. Also in the cOllltest were
Jim English, Arnold Lee, Charles FoX, Eddie English,
-Bill Gerry and Russell Randolph.
The youngst~rs of the v11lage all donned costumes
and marched with their pets and decorated carriages
and bicycles.
~wards were presented to Debbie
Recca, Marlin Maduras, Mickie Maduras and Donna
Sayer. The ladies, not to be outdone, wore gowns
which were over 100 years old~ Agnes Recca, Susie
Foy, Carol Foy, Jane Welchml\D and Alice Hart rode
in the antique cars dUring the p~ade. Later, the
ladies of the Little Theatre Group put on a roaring
twenties revue. With music by Mary Jane Ragone,
Bill Raynor and James Santora, the -"fiappers" sang
the songs of tpat era. Esther ~ohner, Dolly Ragone,
Betty English, Carol Foy, Edith Christman, Evelyn
Sudma.1i Frail Lyons, Dorothy Christman anq Joan
Sayer joined in the singing and dancing program.
The weather was perfect, the'- decorations superb,
and everyone had a great, fun-filled time. About
3,000 people joined in the festivities, and the consensus of opinion was that the skit. presented by
the Volunteer Fire Department, assisted by the Volunteer· Ambulance Corps, was the fUnniest ever seen.
Everyone Wl.IDt home, chuckling at memories of-the
performance, or humming the old tunes, feel1ng great
at having been. part of the history,' present and relived, -ofGree!lwood Lake.
Floyd Patterson showing the PDllero ~oy how to hit the
heavy bag.
·L o·uis Sigaud
".
Pbilos'ophet, Writer, :-
Natu~ralist,
Lawyer,. Historian, Banker,-
.' .Spy
Did you kriow that the mC;>thet of F.rapcis Scott Key,
waS afb,1s ·best wh~ recalling folklore of the Green-.
tra1!s,or blazed new ones. Within a radius of My
cOlnposerof .()11p~atiOIlal/:~them.L...~alledGr:eenwOOd
. wood Lake_and Warwick area. He would recount the
miIes,there was no place which he didn't kDow JntiLake. her home;. or that ~on !3un:;the cQntrovers1al. story. of1,r~k Forrester, author of "Wa~1ck Woodmately •••.• the caves in the Bearfort Ridges, the many
RevoluntlonlU'Y,War f1gure- oilcereptes~edGreenwood :
lands", who .was the first Earl of Carnavon in Englaild,
. falls along th_e Appalachian Trail, espec1allyFitzgerald
.
bul' was considered as a black sheep of the family.
. Fallsnearth,e New M()nroe Road; the lookout crags on
Lake in the :wew york$.t!li:e Legfsllltur-e?
Forrester fiBaJ.ly left England, emigrated to the United
Mt. Zindler .:: or- ToxedoMounta1n as we know It DOW;
Did yoU mow that Miriam Hopkins, motion picture
actress of the -30's and 40's, practiced cartwheels on
- States, where he taught· Greek and Latin ill New York
the old slave cemetery on Gibson H111, near Pius
the lawn at Greek's 'Maplewood Inn while her mother
private schools _and edited the "American Monthly"
School; the abandoned min~s w~ich dot Sterling Forest
was playing cards; or that Warwick's Frank Forrester.
magaiine. When he tired 'of this, Forrester became
hills and the old tr.ailsnow flooded by the Wanaque
intensely interested in oufdoorlife, hunting, fishing,
Reservoir.' These were as well kriown to Sigaud
was America's first sportswriter, andthat~>ne .of his
relatives discovered the tomb of King Tut?
sporting. He moved to this area, where he could live
Windermere Avenue is to a Greenwood Lake resident.
These fascinating bits of folklore and many, many
the high life, and . struck up a friendship with a Mr.
In 1941, while residing at Lincoln Place inBroo!dyn
others were all part of the vast kriowledge of our area
Ward of Warwick, the unschooled owner of "Demerand summering in Greenwood Lake., . Mr.,Sigaud share<;!
which Louis Sigaud acquired during his many years of'
est's Hotel"~ The two had many 'interesting adventhis kriowledge of the outdoors in his book "Historic
living and visiting in, Greenwood Lake~ Her 'personal
tures which finally found t.heir way into Forrester'.s
Trails of 9reenwood Lake Region." The book is in the
backgr01Dld made him well adapted to absorb seemingly
writings.
Greenwood Lake Library. Mr. Sigaud would be amazed
unimportant pieces of information here and there, and
One of Sigaud's favorite stories concerning .Forrestat the changes in the trails were he to follow them 'i n
to weave these bits into one whole story. Aside from
er was a three-day fox hunt which was to begin at
1074•. Many are overgrown, some now have homes on
all his other .interests, Louis Sigaud had once 'been a:
Sugar Loa! and end at Suffern. The hunting party startthe accessways, some no longer exist. Only the
spy.
ed out fine, came over the mountain,. and the end of day
Appalachian Trail remains as he knew it.
In World War I, Louis Sigaud was cited by General
found the group at Windemere Beach having an imBut Louis Sigaud would not be dismayed at these
Black Jack Pershing for conspicuous and meritorious
promptu celebration with a tribe of .Indians. The fox
changes. Louis' Sigaud would simply blaze new tralls.
service in the counter-espionage service at General
bunt was evermore forgotten.
.
He was that kind of man.
.'
, Heaaquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Forces. ·Not
Although stories such as these made very interest-'Before his death in 1973, Louis Sigaud wrote his own .
-long after, he was promoted to Colonel, in command of
ingreading, Forrester was an educated man whose
love story to his beloved Greenwood Lake:
.
the Corps of Intelligence Police. He used these exhistorical. works were highly successful, and later in
"In half a century, pleasantmemones can-accumuperiences and his knowledge in 1935 in his book, "Can
life he longed to return to his family in EI?-gland. But
late astonishingly. They are innumerable beads of
Fr~ce Survive?" , whlch prophesized the fallofFrance
his spendthrift ways had caught up with him, and he_
rosaries of recollection which can be recited inwardly
in World War p. In 1941, he wrote "Douhet and Aerial
never was able to accumulate enough money for the like prayers of reverenfthanksgivJng. They are never
.Warfare", another technical boolt based on his past exfare. F,i nally, overcome by desponden.cy, Forrester
ending litanies that chanted mentally evoke the p-ast
penence. But Louis-Slgaud was an enterta1n1ngwriter,
killed himself. (Rar -from the great outdoors, whic-h
back to life; They are our··yesterdays triumphantly
as well as a technical one. IDs "Belle-Boyd, Confederwas his joy in life, Forrester shot' himself in a roomresurgent.
'
ate SpyU 1-s an easy reading, highly-entertainillg spy
ing house in New y;ork City.)
'-.
"At random, so much comes so quickly and poigstory of -the Civil War days. A copy of this book I:s in
.
The inform.aUon for s(ories such as these was
nantly to mind; the first sight ~d scent of white and
the Greenwood Lake Library •. Included ill the story is
gathered by Louis Slgaud while pursuing .his favorite'
pink arbutus in early April - the regal purple beauty
\:1'0'
"
.
• •
e !~Hl~ ,,~_,",-hobby ••••• walk:ing. A~ie Q!J.~,!9~...mUfl~.w~~~~~';'-S!~..)tr~~l!-!p,ge.~~~p.!1-9.~-~SS?~· :tm.9!1JF, ~to~r;: ·':
how easy . t is once
e c
m~e'fr"f~"'-<-<~~~~..nne way to spenaaaay. usmg a . .
riie splenclor of tbe ra1ces CaIlecrm~fHng ':ilia rri"MnAlthough willing to talk -about his books, Mr. Sigaud
contour map of the region, he followed well-marked
woOO - tlle doe and her fawn at play on the northern
as
HYhe Story of Greenwood Lake"
58
beaches - a hermit thrush singing matins there at
dawn - the sky -acqulver with Northern Lights in
July - humming birds sipping n~ctar from trumpet
. flowers ... '
"The gentle life-gl,ving rains of spring - the exultingly emergent flowers - paddling .a canoe at · dusk
on ' the. West . A.rm - the boats off Chapel Island at
church service ' Sunday: evenings. High over Bar
Rock ~ crescent moon hanging from a star pinned
just about it - sunsets and -rainbows seen from Mt.
Peter - Warwick valley vIewed at any time fro~
anywhere - snow on the hills - sunrise at Mt. Zindle' .flying' ducks etched across the sky - the charm and
serenity of waterstone Cottage in its' heyday - swim'ming from Brandon Beach toward the center of the
Lake.
'
. .
"Columbine among the rocks above the east shore the Lake and hills seen from nearby ledges - skating
the length of the Lake on mirrorlike black ice - .
swimming off Duck Rock in Babcock Cove - the view
from Sterling Fire Tower .,. the insistent, murmurous
gossip of wavelets lapping the ledges of Forest Knolls.
"Nor can I forget the plaint of whill-poor-w1lls at
twilight - wild strawberries in .June - bittersweet in
October - the scented fragrance of hay - good friends
here and everywhere about the Lake - welcolIling lights
in familiar windows - the healing silence of the woods.
"Then,.too, the memory of meoriesi the incredible
years of happiness with Margaret_in our homes in
Lakelands, Windermere ' Park, and elsewhere during
which so much that is now deathless came to be
and which, for me, without her would nothave been."
- Green and whit!! markers on the highway mark the en,trances to the Appalachian Trail.
D
-
"/
G
LEGEND: A.. New Ml>nroe Highway: crosses A.ppalachian Trail about 3 mUes north of .Village (~ate marker) at "Fox Crossing" • . B. 011 Mt>nro·<l R.nd: D'ltch Hollow are-a. C. Fitzgerald Falls: a s~l')rt walk from
IHW !l1idjle School. 0". Old Tuxedo Rd.: paved from B to F ; ab9.ndoned after east crossing of F CRt. 2l0-l7A.)
E. Mombasha Lake. F •. Rte; 2l0-17A.; Warwick-Greenwood Lake-Tuxedo Highway. G. Jersey· Ave.-W~st
Shore H.ighway. R. Sterling Ro-ad-East Shore Roa1. J. Surp!'isa Lake. K. Sm(;:>"~h~.n~ Iro]. PO:.l':I. L. Ce::!ar
Ponds. M. Hewitt-Sterling Furnace Road. N. SterlingLake-SterlinGFurrtace.Road. P. M·)e Mountaln ~d.­
Warwick: 1/2 mlle east of this road on the Appalachian Tl'ail is the site of th~ Old Ce,ltennial M,ne.
R. Bellevale Road: 100) 'y!!ars ag;), .a.. old jlrt ro.-a::! to B"~llvalei alO:1g its route were hO.mt1S of farmt1r.s,
mIners, . and a school. S. Sterling Lake. Original site of Sterling Forest ObserVation Tower. X. Wildcat
Rocks: a small cave althe foot of'tbese rocks is tradition'llly o:J.e of th~3e u.'led 'J] Claudlu:, Sm:Jb to ~as?
ttie ioot of his raids 1;lring the Am,~ "lcan Revplution. As recently as 19.68, a den of wildcats was discovered in this area. These were compiled .in 19410, by Louis Sigaud. No effort" has been m::>.de w!thin this
year to verify the route .of sO~': o~ thesa road;5, 1. Appalacbial1 Trail: green state ml::.rkers on New MO:lroe Road and R1. i 7 Ai trail markings are. "AT" in white. 2. Mountain .SpringTrall: ?ld Indi;m path. 3.
Cascade Brook Trail: joins path to ButtermUk ·Falls. 4. Furnace Brook Trail: at>:m , 1/2 mtlenorth of
State lin.~. 5. Surprise Lake .Trail: starts at State line,,.. "Lookout Rock". 6. Longhouse Creek Tr3fl:
once an old wood road • . 7. Spruce,.Swamp . Trail: begins on ridge above Furnace Brook. 8. ButtermJJk
Falls Paths. 11. ' Skyline or Rldge Trill: from Mll:nt'asha H:.gh'po:'.n~ Jo Sterling Forest tow'.!r is 8 mUes,
12. Lakelands Trail: begins 1/4 mile up Rt. 2l0-Tuxedo Highway -' bank of stream - crosses Skyline Trail
- onC.e a wooden road from .there· to sterling Lake. ~.4. Jemli~s H)llow Trail:. very faint in pans; w~s
once a wagoo trail. 15 . Laurel Swaml= Trail: b.e&ins 0!);>')13ite Watersto:le-Bridge above Sylvan Park;
crosses Bear Rock Trail just above Brandon site, continues on Jennings Hollow Trail and branches to
Sterling Lake~ 16. Bear Ro;:k Trail (Bare Rock Trail): begins ' jIB~ abo'!c Bi'3!lde>:l site, ascen.::!;, very
steeply to Jennings Hollow -Trail. 17. -sterling Forest Trail. 18. Babcock Cove Trail . . 19. HeWItt High
Trail: begins just north of state line (old Erie R.R. Station site). ~1'lny of these· trails are overgroW!l, or
their entrances from highways now !lav'c priva!e resrd'~:lces 0 ') th~m .. Th.< ~ra.lls are those follofl~.J Jy
Louis Sigaud whose trail book was published in 1941.
Th'e Past"
Decade
May.be because we are so close to them," we tend
to think of recent events as unim:;:>ortant and un. eXCiting, when compared to the "good old days".
Time seems "to enhance all things, and the happenings
of a generation ago are rememhered as funnter,
happier, better. We forget the hard times, the pressing
problems of years ago. Only when we are deprived
of the conveniences of O'lr generation ,can Wg appre. ciate the differences between our .time. and those
days of long ago. It wlll take another generation,
another celebratio:J., another history, before our time
is referred ' to as "the ' good old (lays", but events
of the past.ten years have . already shaped the destiny
of Greenwood Lake. Our "Village" is wilat we make
of it, and ~ven "no change at all" wlll . ~hange us in
relation- to .the villages surroundin~ it. .
Greenwood Lake of the sixties and early seventies
saw quite a few changes. The Ambulance Corps
Building became a reality 0:1 land d·)nated by L . Gustam Moses~ The Corps had their own radio equip.mlmt to speed response tim e, .and their record is
·a proud o].e~
.- The Chaml:l"~r" o.~ CO-:rJ IJ1 .1i;,!e· 'N33 En lUll swtng,
publicizing the la:.te w!.th ;'0,)00 color brochures,
ggeen license plates telling everyone the "Greenwood
Lake i,s a Year Round Rason", folders distributed
throughout all transportation terminals. There were
sailfish and sunfish regattas, water ski shows, sky
divers, ·a."ld a 'circus. The winter m~ant ice boating
races, the Mid-Atlantic "Ice Sk~ing Championships,
•
skiing at Mount Peter and Sterling Forest.
The Little Theatre produced "The Boy Friend"
and "The Moon is Blue' , and the elegant supperclub, The 90ve was open fQr business. ' Our p;:>pulation increased as summ.~r residents decided to
make Greenwood Lake their year 'round home, and
_, city dwellers discovered that the lake offered the
ideal setting.... a great place to raise a family, yet
close enough to comm'lte to city employment....the
best of both worlds.
.
others dlscovered Greenwood Lake....the youngsters
from New Jersey.... and the resulting 'publicity only
added to' the weekend crowds. ' These "tea;1-agers"
w'~re . old enough to 1rive, but too young to drink
in their own :state, so they travelled across the
state. line where driDking at 18 was legal. Gabe
Pressman did a full · hour T.V. program about the
lake. It solved nothing, and encouraged more young
New Jersey people to "com.1 to where the action
is." The· Police. D'~i>artment problems grew, as our
proximity to the big city made us wlnerable to' the
problems of New York.
. In 1963, the entire East Coast suffered the beginning of a drought. Forest fires raged ov'e r 1,500
acres in the fall, and volunteer firemen battled day
and night to' protect homeS al'ld property. The entire
comm1;lllity united, --and t~se · who were not actually
. fighting the flam.~s assisted · by donating food and
b<lverages.
.
.
The drought brought other worr:ies to Greenwood
Lake as New Jersey threatened to lower' the lake to
provide water for their homns and industries. Ao"'llin,
the comm·.mity acted .as one body, with bUSinessmen,
hom·.~owners, and Politicians objecting vehem;mtly to
, the plan which w~uld affect our drinking water supply
and hom,~s and business.
We were alone in this
tight, Greenwood Lake - New York and New Jersey.
until help came. from Joe St. L~wrence and Jack
Schlosser. The threat never materialized b\lt it made
us more aware. of how dependent w'awere upon the
lake for our sUrvival.
The sourid of mi1Sic changed in those years, and
along with fa';rorites Marty Farricker and Bob Duffy
,' w'~re groups such as Johnny Pierce and the Cash'meres, The Four Seasons, and The Bachelors Five.
Chubby Checker and Eats Domlno came to Greenwood
Lake for shows, and TruDee Sullivan, "the girl with the
mostest"; was a regular at the Lihden House. The
Co:oanut Grove introduced a new kind of danclr!..g, along
with exotic . names ....Navida, Fatima, Zanira...- For
$2.95, one could have a : "~ln, live lobSter dinner"
while watching 'a floor.. .show; and for My cents, a
week night special, one ' could see Sean Connery In
"FroIJI Russia With l:;07e" l!-t the Playh'J use,
Rumors flew all over that the Beatles were going
to appear ' in Greenwood , Lake,_but only their movJe
""Hard Day's Night" came to town. We dld host
Alexander King and Jack Parr, and Sam Levinson
ca:me to visit with friends in Windermere Park.
Frank McGuire came back for a little wl11le, on a
visit from hiS coaching chores at North Carolina
State, and Frank O'Connor ' stayed in his home in
Indian Park. "Ed 'McCarthy, head .-groundkeeper at
Shea Stadium, lived in Indian Park and offered invaluable . advice conc'e rning the ballfield which was
in the process of being built.
The Lions Club undertook" Project YAF" , the Youth
~et1c Field, and to raise the funds gave :a beefsteak
dinner with live mUsic and ·entertainm.wt. Every '
entertainer in the lake turned out to make the dinner
a succ,e ss, and there was a four-hour ' continuous
performance for the benefit of the com munity. W!J.eD
. the . word was received that the ' chef -would not be
able to- mue the dinner, our oWn Freddie Ruprecht,
Executive 'Chef at the Four.' Seasons in New York,
ste.IlPed in to take his place. The funds were raised'
and work on the field begun. From the days of just
a backs to? and infield, the ballfield has ' been developed into one ' with fences~ lights, refreshment
stand 'and grand stand. Gam.~s are ·played ffio:;lrning,
Mon and night. In ,the early .days, there was only
the Bicycle League, youth <::ommission League, and
Sunday Morning League. Now, the Lions FIeld is
use::! by the Merchants' League, BIcycle League,
Fire Departm.ent and Junior League. The Junior
League began with registration for only 8 baseball
teams . for boys 9. to 11. Now there are 10 baseball teall)s, 5 boys' softball teams, 6 girls' soft-
/
ffThe Story of Greenwood
Lake"
9
G ._
_"J:"he new Firehouse and Village Offices under construction during the 1970s.
ball teams -and 2 football teams.
Another organization w1.lich began in the, sixties
has been most successful and carried the name of
G"reepwood Lake, to all our credit, -to many neighboring vill~es and tOW!IS.
The Greenwo;>-j Lake
Drum ~d - Bugle Corps began with a meeting in the
Recreation Hall in 1965 with Sal Ciappettachairing.
The Corps gave its first concert at Florida, New
York for Girl Scout Day.
SL'lce then, they have
travelled to concerts and parades from Nanuet to
Niagara Falls, anj h'lve "done us proud". They
have marched in the New York St. Patrick's Day
Parade, performed in color guard competitions, and
ho.stoo. the shows for other Corps. Under the direction
,of Jim Shaw, the 'Greenwood Lake _Drum and Bugle
Corps has developed into one of the best in the Eastern
Circuit, and has been awarded many trophies.
While our young people were working and learning
how to work toge~her, our older reSidents were n:>t
idle.- The Senior' Citizens. organized first ~der the
name of the "Tuesday P_M.ers" and m.~t in the Grace
LutJieran ,Sunday School r();)m. WIth encouragemt'mt
and sponsorship ..fi"-om the Vfllage Board~ they became
!mown officially as the Senior Citizen's Clut> and In.,'veti
their rneetiJjgs to tin Village Hall . They organizect as
a social club with bus outings, picnics, special cele\ .brations and get-togethers. but wit~ t~eir first few
-, months, became a service organization
well, with
assistance given to the Heart 'Fund, Red Cross Drives
and UNICE E<'. Inform;X:t of pending legislation which
will affect all semor citizens , ther attended meetings
and made their voices heard. With visits to shut-ins,
Orange Co~nty Farm residents, and memi1ers wilo are
ill, they perform a service ,in this commimity which
is in.valuable.
The , Club lias been commilnded by
New York State' as having one of the most active,
I
highly partiCipatory and ihterested memberships in
~ ' the State.
- ,
The r esidents of Greenwood Lake saw mmyb:lildings
take on a new look during the past _ten'years. The
changes were impercepible at first .••. new siding or
a sErucing up ...• new paint or a new roof•.•. brick
w!leFe once there W'lS o::lly w'.)od •••. a small addition
to· an ex,isting- building. Many ·tim.,s, the changes
were inside with all new panelling, or· a ro:>rn iJeing
e:llarged.
But so:>n, from (me end of the Village
to the other, there were people renovating, renewIng ...•
and building. Nevi hom.1s and new businesses W'i!re
up In no timil. The Grand · Union decided it was timlil
for new quarters, and . becam.~ the largest building
on Windermere Avenue. Emuire National Bank built
almost directly across from -It. The VUlageBuiiding
wyls becoming too small to house. the new equ1pmi~nt
being :used and :;l. new Fire,house and Village Office
BuUding was btJilt 0::1 Waters~one Road.
The G,reenwOQd -Lake S~hool Distrlctcoml)leted
tts newest building in ~~3, and held offiCial opening
cerem-:'Inies
in 1974. Just across the r.oad from'the
-
ne~
, Firehouse - 1974.
\,
a
building Is
house wl;lich Oe¥s mute testimony
to the saying "history repeats itself." The Santarpia hom.1 wa~fthel'e ,to see the opening of that
fIrst school-house in Dutch Hollow over a hundred
yea~s ago.
The , tim as have changed •••• instead of
wagons pulled by horses, ' such as Dan -Kelly drove,
the, house looks out on school buses and the latest
'model cars~ The styles have ' ~hanged ••••from long
sIqrts to short skirts to miniskirts and jeans •••• and
long skirts again;'
_
But the people haven't changed. From the time
.of The Revolution, they have oppOsed each other on'
. some issues, then ban-jed -together to oppose the "outsider" WI10 would try to force other issues.
They have competed, and t hen cooperated .••• but seldQrn
have they baen apathetic. And regardless of the
"issues", they have always been ready to reach
out to eacrr-other with a helping hand.
The Greenwood Lake News, which celebrated its
10th bir~h-1.30y' 0-:1 May 15, 19'74, extends to the People
of Greenwood Lake ifs best wishes on the 50th birth,..
day of the Village of Greenw'.)~d Lake.
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To our ~E!.a~_'ililj -,:o th~ Volunteer Fir.e Departm-€!nt •••.
HAP PY BIRTHDAY !,
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l'he Police "booth", on the co'rner of \II/i,n-nc,rmoro
Street, was demolished a couple of years ago.
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Under a spanking breeze, iceboats skim around a charted course in tight competition.
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Elected Officials of the Village of Greenwood Lake, July, 1974. Standing I to r, Trustees
Sealed I'te r, Trus'ee _o~I ' ~'iller f!,1ayn r Arthur Brueck ,er, Trustee- Bernard V'lin~nl ey .
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iIIage justIce Vincent McGinley._
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- ttThe Story of Greenwood Lake"
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A full color page of Greenwood Lake scenes (drawn by Jolian Hix) appeared in"Har'per's Weekly" magazine in 1888.
Promotion such as this was partir responsible for the early groWth of Greenwood Lake. A color copy of this page may
be seen in the Greenwood Lake ib/ary. 1. "From the clubhouse window looking South." 1. Ruins of a blast fur.
Jlace. 3. The Clubhouse .. 4: A likely nook for bass. 5~ Looking up the lake, South. .
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"GREENWOOD LAKE, NEW YORK" BY JAS~ER F. CROPSEY
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